Why this word is great
FAINEANTISM — [Noun] The practice or ideology of deliberate idleness; a shameless refusal to engage in work or effort. From the French fainéant ("do-nothing, idler"), itself from fait ("does") + néant ("nothing"), with the suffix '-ism' denoting a practice or ideology. Unlike "indolence" (which suggests a passive aversion to activity) or "sloth" (which moralizes laziness as sin), faineantism is an almost performative abstention from action, a studied non-participation in the world’s demands. It is the aristocrat lounging in a sunlit salon while servants bustle, the cat stretching indolently atop a stack of unfinished paperwork, or the bureaucrat who lets documents gather dust in his drawer—an artful negation of productivity, a quiet rebellion against the tyranny of doing.