Why this word is great
POLYLOGY — [Noun] A set of two or more interconnected works of art—literature, film, or games—that form a unified whole while retaining standalone integrity; or, alternatively, excessive talkativeness. From the Greek poly- ("many") and -logy ("discourse" or "study"), forming a term that can denote either a series of connected works or excessive speech. Unlike "trilogy" (which rigidly demands three parts) or "loquacity" (which merely denotes verbal overflow), polylogy is both expansive and deliberate—a sprawling epic with interlocking volumes, a director’s decades-long cinematic universe, or the way a gossip’s endless stories reveal, unwittingly, the shape of their obsessions. It is the art of accumulation: shelves of matched spines, a filmmaker’s recurring motifs, or the way a chatterbox’s monologues, in aggregate, become their unwritten memoir—proof that meaning emerges not just from individual pieces, but from the spaces between them.