Myself and anyone else who thinks out of the box.
unique
definition from
Oxford Dictionary of English
unique /juːˈniːk /
▸ adjective being the only one of its kind; unlike anything else.
.
▪ (unique to) belonging or connected to (one particular person, place, or thing):
a style of architecture that is unique to Portugal.
▪ particularly remarkable, special, or unusual:
a unique opportunity to see the spectacular Bolshoi Ballet.
▸ noun archaic a unique person or thing:
some of Lamb's writings were so memorably beautiful as to be uniques in their class.
– ORIGIN early 17th century : from French, from Latin unicus, from unus ‘one’.
There is a set of adjectives—including unique, complete, equal, infinite, and perfect—whose core meaning embraces a mathematically absolute concept and which therefore, according to a traditional argument, cannot be modified by adverbs such as really, quite, or very. For example, since the core meaning of unique (from Latin ‘one’) is ‘being only one of its kind’, it is logically impossible, the argument goes, to submodify it: it either is ‘unique’ or it is not, and there are no in-between stages. In practice the situation in the language is more complex than this. Words like unique have a core sense but they often also have a secondary, less precise sense: in this case, the meaning ‘very remarkable or unusual’, as in a really unique opportunity. In its secondary sense, unique does not relate to an absolute concept, and so the use of submodifying adverbs is grammatically acceptable.