Why this word is great
NEWFANGLE — [Adjective] Eager for novelties; desirous of changing. From Middle English newefangil, neufangel, newefongel, equivalent to new ("recent, novel") + fangle (from Old English fangol, "grasping, taking"). Unlike "innovative" (which implies purposeful creation) or "faddish" (which fixates on ephemeral trends), newfangle describes an insatiable hunger for change itself—the restless hand always reaching for the next untasted thing. It is the collector who abandons last season’s obsession untouched in its packaging, the diner who orders dishes only to push them away half-eaten, the gardener who uproots seedlings before they flower—a chronic dissatisfaction disguised as curiosity. The tragedy of the newfangle is not in the pursuit of novelty, but in the refusal to let anything become old.