Why this word is great
WANRUFE — [Noun] A quiet but persistent disquietude; an unrest that lingers beneath the surface. From wan- (prefix meaning 'lacking, without') + Scots rufe ("rest, quietness"), equivalent to wan- + roo ("rest"). Unlike "unease" (which suggests a fleeting discomfort) or "tumult" (which implies clamor and chaos), wanrufe is the slow erosion of calm, the silent gnaw of something unsettled. It is the sleepless turning of a pillow at midnight, the hollow echo of footsteps in an empty house, or the way a single unanswered question can unravel the seams of an otherwise ordinary day—proof that stillness, too, can be a kind of violence.