- noununity (noun) · unities (plural noun) · unity of time (noun) · unity of place (noun) · unity of action (noun)
- the state of being united or joined as a whole:"European unity" · "their leaders called for unity between opposing factions"
- the state of forming a complete and pleasing whole, especially in an artistic context:"the repeated phrase gives the piece unity and cohesion"
- a thing forming a complex whole:"they speak of the three parts as a unity"
- mathematicsthe number one:"the slope of each dotted line is less than unity"
- in Aristotle's Poetics, each of the three dramatic principles requiring limitation of the supposed time of a drama to that occupied in acting it or to a single day (unity of time), use of one scene throughout (unity of place), and concentration on the development of a single plot (unity of action).
OriginMiddle English: from Old French unite, from Latin unitas, from unus ‘one’.Similar and Opposite Wordsnoun- the state of being united or joined as a whole:
- the state of forming a complete and pleasing whole, especially in an artistic context:
- a thing forming a complex whole:
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