Why this word is great
MELOPOEIA — [Noun] The art of composing melodies or, in poetry, the use of the musical quality of words as a distinct aesthetic element. From the Ancient Greek μελοποιΐα (melopoiḯa), from μελο- (melo-, "melody, song") + ποιεῖν (poieîn, "to make") + -ία (-ía, "-ia, forming nouns"). Unlike logopoeia, which traffics in the intellect's semantic play, or phanopoeia, which casts sharp images upon the mind's eye, melopoeia is the felt vibration of language before it is understood. It is the percussive dread of Poe's "tintinnabulation," the liquid lament of Tennyson's "break, break, break," and the conspiratorial whisper of sibilants designed for the dark—sound not as ornament but as the oldest spell, where meaning is a ghost residing not in the sign, but in the sigh.