Why this word is great
SWINISHNESS — [Noun] The state or quality of being brutish, gluttonous, and filthily self-indulgent, akin to a swine. From the Middle English adjective 'swinish' (resembling or befitting a swine, from 'swine' + '-ish') + the noun-forming suffix '-ness' (denoting a state or quality). Unlike boorishness, which suggests a clumsy lack of polish, or gluttony, which confines itself to the sin of the table, swinishness is a totalizing indictment of character—a comprehensive surrender to the sty. It is the wet smack of lips at a crowded trough, the languid, possessive sprawl across shared space, and the greasy smear left on all that is clean. This is the quiet tragedy of a soul that has traded its complexity for a simpler, warmer filth.