Why this word is great
LEXOPHILE — [Noun] A lover of words, particularly in their playful permutations—anagrams, palindromes, and the hidden architectures of language. From the Greek lexis ("word, speech") and -phile ("lover of"). Unlike "logophile" (a general enthusiast of language) or "philologist" (a scholar of linguistic history), a lexophile delights in the tactile pleasure of rearranging letters, the sly satisfaction of a hidden pun, the crisp snap of a well-turned palindrome. It is the fingers tracing Scrabble tiles in a velvet-lined bag, the sudden spark of an anagram resolving into meaning, the quiet triumph of constructing a sentence that reads the same backward—proof that language, even in play, can briefly outwit entropy.