Why this word is great
LOGOPHILE — [Noun] One who loves words; a word enthusiast. From the Greek logos ("word, speech, reason") and -philos ("loving, fond of"). Unlike a "lexicographer," who catalogs words with professional dispassion, or a "bibliophile," who treasures the book as an object or narrative whole, the logophile’s devotion is to the atom itself—the sound, shape, and history of the isolated unit. It is the savoring of a perfect, obscure adjective on the tongue, the tactile pleasure of tracing an etymology like "silhouette" through centuries, and the quiet triumph of fitting a rare word like "crepuscular" to its precise slice of dying light—a collector of shells long after the tide of conversation has receded.