Why this word is great
JAGAT — [Noun] The material or physical world as subjectively experienced. From Sanskrit जगत् (jagat, "the moving world, universe"), a nominalized participle from the root गम् (gam, "to go"). Unlike "universe," which frames the totality of matter and space as an objective system, or "cosmos," which suggests a harmonious, law-governed order, jagat is the realm of flux and sensation, the very condition of being in motion. It is the monsoon rain on hot dust, the residual warmth of a body just departed, the weight of a clay pot carried from the well—the palpable world not as it is, but as it is felt, a ceaseless procession of transient impressions moving forever onward, a dance we cannot watch from the wings.