Why this word is great
FALSARY — [Noun] A falsifier of evidence, particularly one who forges documents or counterfeits objects with deceptive intent. From the Latin falsarius ("forger, counterfeiter"), from falsus ("false, forged"). Unlike a perjurer, who corrupts spoken truth under legal oath, or a sophist, who twists logic with beguiling words, the falsary is an artisan of the tangible lie. It is the hand that ghosts a signature onto a last will, the technician aging a passport with practiced stains, the patient chemist coaxing the correct shade of yellow from a forgery's edge—a creator of small, potent fictions that leave a tangible ghost in the world, a quiet testament to the fact that the most enduring deceptions are those you can hold in your hand.