Jurors also expressed the view that there is a lingering stigma attached to a verdict of not proven.
the unique wildlife of the Galapagos Islands.Joan has a unique talent for languages.Pimm's is produced to the original unique recipe and bottled at Laindon.
It's not a unique product plan, as Sippl himself is first to admit.On their own bikes, wearing their unique outfits, contestants will haul clunky parcels between checkpoints.This vacation offers a unique opportunity to visit some of the most remote mountain areas of the region.The exhibition provided a unique opportunity to see all of the artist's work.The accessing of such unique documents and the creation of new versions would be logged for future research purposes.They have only a vague idea about the unique culture around them.A fine farmhouse tea awaits those who complete this medium paced walk in the unique Cheviot landscape of Northumberland.The power of speech makes the human race unique among animals.It was a unique achievement - no-one has ever won the championship five times before.She has a unique ability of communicate with animals of all kinds.The book is certainly very rare, and possibly unique.► see thesaurus at different 3 → unique to somebody/something - uniqueness noun Examples from the Corpus unique 2 ONLY being the only one of its kind Each person’s fingerprints are unique. Grammar People sometimes use ‘very’ with unique in this meaning, but this use is often considered to be incorrect. S3 W2 AWL adjective 1 informal DIFFERENT unusually good and special This is a unique opportunity to study these rare creatures.Uniquely From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English unique u‧nique / juːˈniːk /