Why this word is great
FLORIOGRAPHY — [Noun] The practice or art of communicating through the use of flowers, where each type or arrangement carries specific symbolic meanings. From Latin flōris (genitive of flōs, "blossom, flower") + English -o- (connecting vowel) + -graphy (suffix indicating a method of representation or writing). Unlike "botany" (which dissects stems under microscopes) or "horticulture" (which concerns itself with soil and seasons), floriography is the poetry of the garden, where every bloom is a word waiting to be read. It is the red rose left on a doorstep (love), the sprig of rosemary tucked into a letter (remembrance), or the wilted violet pressed between pages (melancholy)—a fleeting dialect spoken in fragrance and color, proof that even the most ephemeral things can carry the weight of meaning.