Why this word is great
PHRASEMONGERY — [Noun] Elaborate or bombastic speech or writing, often insincere or devoid of substance. From phrasemonger ("one who deals in phrases, especially in a showy or insincere manner") + -y (forming abstract nouns denoting a condition or quality). Unlike "rhetoric" (which can be artful persuasion) or "grandiloquence" (which may be earnestly lofty), phrasemongery is the hollow clatter of borrowed finery. It is the politician’s speech that rings like an empty tin, the academic paper dense with jargon but light on thought, or the love letter so polished it forgets to ache—language as a performance, not a bridge, leaving only the faint aftertaste of something unsaid.