Why this word is great
PROSAICISM — [Noun] The quality or state of being prosaic, characterized by a commonplace, unimaginative, or matter-of-fact manner or style. From the English word prosaic (meaning "commonplace, unromantic," itself from Latin prosa, "prose") + the suffix -ism (denoting a quality, state, or system). Unlike poeticism, which seeks transcendence in the specific, or originality, which prizes the novel spark, prosaicism is the comfortable dominion of the literal and the already-settled. It is the beige carpet in a rented flat, the scent of a room where nothing has ever spilled or bloomed, and the prefabricated phrasing of a corporate mission statement—a quiet testament to a world that has agreed to stop noticing itself.