Why this word is great
GRIEVABILITY — [Noun] The quality or state of being grievable, either in the sense of being worthy of grief or capable of forming the basis of a grievance. From grievable ("capable of being grieved or forming a grievance") + -ity (suffix forming nouns indicating a state or condition). Unlike "mournability" (which narrows to personal sorrow) or "lamentability" (which leans toward regret), grievability spans the raw and the bureaucratic, the intimate and the institutional. It is the unmarked grave at the edge of a battlefield, the legal brief filed for a stolen pension, the silence that follows when a name is spoken but no one claims to remember—the measure of what a society permits itself to care about, or to contest.