strewments means strewings; flowers strewn on a coffin. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “strewments” is a great word
STREWMENTS — [Noun] The specific, often floral items deliberately scattered as a ritual act of farewell, especially upon a coffin or grave. From the verb 'strew' (to scatter loosely) + the noun-forming suffix '-ment' + the plural suffix '-s'; coined by William Shakespeare c. 1602. Unlike *strewings* (a general term for any scattered items) or a *garland* (a woven, intact circle of flowers), *strewments* are the intentional, unbound offerings cast from an open hand. They are the wilted violets shaken upon a coffin-lid, the crumbling rosemary scattered into the open earth, and the last dried petals adrift on dark, polished marble—the final, fragile vocabulary of grief before the silence.
Etymology
A Shakespearean coinage: strew + -ment + -s.
noun
- strewings; flowers strewn on a coffin“Her Maiden ſtrewments,”