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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Uniquely

Unique \U*nique"\, a. [F. unique; cf. It. unico; from L. unicus, from unus one. See One.] Being without a like or equal; unmatched; unequaled; unparalleled; single in kind or excellence; sole. -- U*nique"ly, adv. -- U*nique"ness, n.

Wiktionary
uniquely

adv. in a unique manner

WordNet
uniquely

adv. so as to be unique; "he could determine uniquely the properties of the compound" [syn: unambiguously]

Usage examples of "uniquely".

This is another aspect of the archetype of American exceptionalism: our society has been uniquely fair.

It will do no good, at this point, to claim that Buddhists are participating in the same Logos that was uniquely manifested in Jesus.

BPS states is that their properties are uniquely, easily, and exactly determined without resort to a perturbative calculation.

And, second, the pineal is a structure found uniquely in humans and not present in other animals.

From this Broca - and after him many others - developed an entire speculative apparatus about how functional brain asymmetry was a uniquely human characteristic, and how adults, males and whites showed much greater such asymmetry than children, females and blacks.

Apart from the fact that he is a great and, one might say, uniquely original artist, Goya is significant as being, in his Later Works, the almost perfect type of the man who knows only sorrow and not the ending of sorrow.

Since the Kanun is uniquely their own though, the Albanians see it as part of their cultural identity, something that sets them apart from the guys with the guns who keep seizing power and dictating RLBs to them.

Vanna told them that their systems had leveled out as expected, uniquely parallel to each other.

I shared the condition of slavery with other bond wenches, but each of us, of course, as masters know, in the depths and complexity of us, is a surprisingly and uniquely different individual, a latent prize for the chain, an astonishment fascinating to learn and subdue.

SOUND SIGNATURE The collection of characteristic sounds, both broadband and narrowband tonals, that uniquely identify a class of ship, and sometimes, the exact ship itself.

As a social group that lay somewhere between the peasantry and the educated classes, the merchants, they believed, were uniquely qualified to lead the nation in a way that reconciled its Muscovite and Petrine elements.

Now, it was given to me to be free again, to be uniquely myself, living for myself, procreativeness giving way to creativity.

Recently, one analyst had completed a report proving the obvious: because of the amount of profits from trading-which in turn relied on the willingness of others to strike multimillion-dollar transactions on the promise of payment-Enron was uniquely dependent on its credit rating, meaning a downgrade could set off a death spiral.

Virgilian figure, not Homeric, and has about it the uniquely Virgilian plangency.

He thought that at the brain volume of Homo erectus-about 750 cubic centimeters, roughly the engine displacement of a fast motorcycle -the uniquely human qualities begin to emerge.