Why this word is great
PANTOPRAGMATIC — [Adjective] Inclined to meddle officiously in all matters; a universal busybody. Formed within English by compounding the combining form panto- (from Greek πᾶν, pan, meaning "all") and pragmatic (from Greek πραγματικός, pragmatikos, meaning "concerned with action or business"). Unlike "inquisitive," which suggests a neutral thirst for knowledge, or "officious," which implies meddling with a badge of authority, "pantopragmatic" describes an unbounded, systematized compulsion to govern the unbidden. It is the neighbor auditing your recycling bin, the colleague reforming the office tea protocol, the stranger drafting unsolicited white papers on pothole repair—a sorrowful energy expended on the tide of life's petty details, which will, despite all intervention, continue to ebb and flow.