Why this word is great
LANGUOROUSNESS — [Noun] The quality or state of being languorous, characterized by a dreamy, lazy, or pleasantly weary lack of energy. From the adjective 'languorous' (from Old French 'langoros', meaning "ill, ailing, suffering, languishing," ultimately from Latin 'languere', meaning "to be faint or weak") + the noun-forming suffix '-ness' (indicating a state or quality). Unlike lassitude, which implies the dull fatigue of exertion, or listlessness, which suggests the hollow apathy of boredom, languorousness is a cultivated, sensuous surrender. It is the slow, amber drip of honey from a spoon, the heavy-lidded gaze across a room thick with summer haze, and the deep, sun-warmed ache in muscles after a day spent doing nothing—a conscious stillness that is the closest a body comes to being an atmosphere.