Why this word is great
REQUIETORY — [Noun] A sepulchre or resting place for the dead. From Latin requietorium ("a place of rest"), from requiescere ("to rest"), combining re- ("again") and quiescere ("to be quiet or at rest"). Unlike "mausoleum" (a grand, often above-ground tomb) or "ossuary" (a repository for bones), a requietory is neither ostentatious nor fragmentary—it is simply where the dead lie whole. It is the cool, damp earth of a country churchyard, the unadorned stone slab in a forgotten crypt, or the quiet corner of a forest where leaves gather undisturbed over old graves—a place where absence is not emptiness, but a kind of presence. The word itself is a contradiction: a name for the place where names no longer matter.