LexicalGravity describes the force that emerges when a term is not merely coined but repeatedly placed into circulation across a sufficiently dense conceptual field. In Anto Lloveras’ Socioplastics, names acquire weight through recurrence. Each reappearance thickens their relational environment, attaches them to new contexts, and increases the probability that future nodes, readers, search systems, and language models will encounter them as stable conceptual coordinates rather than isolated expressions. The result is a form of semantic attraction. This force is cumulative but not automatic. Repetition without structure produces noise; LexicalGravity depends on disciplined reuse, cross-reference, metadata, citation, and contextual variation. An operator such as TopolexicalSovereignty becomes gravitational when its successive appearances do more than duplicate an earlier definition: they connect the term to scale, archive, machine readability, authorship, and institutional resistance. The word begins to pull dispersed propositions into an increasingly coherent orbit. Within a corpus of thousands of nodes, this mechanism becomes architecturally significant. Certain lexical formations accumulate enough density to organise navigation through the wider field, while others remain peripheral or dormant. Vocabulary thus develops a topology of centres, satellites, corridors, and zones of weak attraction. LexicalGravity ultimately proposes that language has mass when it is systematically sustained. Naming is not the final act of conceptualisation but the beginning of a longer process in which recurrence produces recognition, recognition produces relational density, and density produces infrastructural force. In Socioplastics, a concept becomes powerful when the corpus itself begins to remember where it belongs.