unanimity means the condition of agreement by all parties, the state of being unanimous. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 78 out of 100.
unanimity is pronounced /ˌjuːnəˈnɪmɪti/.
Why “unanimity” is a great word
UNANIMITY — [Noun] The condition of complete agreement by all parties involved. From Middle French unanimité, from Late Latin ūnanimitās, from Latin ūnanimus ("of one mind"), from ūnus ("one") + animus ("mind, spirit"). First attested in English in the mid-15th century. Unlike "consensus," which implies a general accord that can endure a silent minority, or "concord," which suggests a harmony of relations, unanimity is the absolute, often brittle alignment of every single will. It is the held breath before the gavel falls, the uncanny synchronicity of a flock turning as one, and the silent, heavy assent around a boardroom table when no one dares to voice the obvious flaw—a perfection so complete it feels less like a human achievement than a momentary spell.
noun
- The condition of agreement by all parties, the state of being unanimous.“Mankind were wrong, it seems, in concluding that all swans were white: are we also wrong, when we conclude that all men's heads grow above their shoulders, and never below, in spite of the conflicting testimony of the naturalist Pliny? As there were black swans, though civilised people had existed for three thousand years on the earth without meeting with them, may there not also be "men whose hea”