Why this word is great
MACROLOGY — [Noun] The use of many words to say very little; long-winded, redundant, and essentially meaningless discourse. From the combining form macro- (from Greek μακρός, meaning "long") and -logy (from Greek -λογία, meaning "speaking" or "discourse"). Unlike pleonasm, which denotes a specific, compact redundancy ("true fact"), or grandiloquence, which may cloak a genuine idea in pomp, macrology is sheer verbal mass for its own sake, a discourse devoid of payload. It is the corporate memo that pages to convey a platitude, the political speech that orbits a vacant center, and the academic paper that buries a truism beneath a cairn of jargon—the solemn performance of communication as a substitute for the act itself.