The vote wass passed by unanimous desicion
The vote was unanimous. Bob had won.
The law was passed with a unanimous vote.
Being of one mind; agreeing in opinion, design, or determination; consentient; not discordant or dissentient; harmonious; as, the assembly was unanimous; the members of the council were unanimous., Formed with unanimity; indicating unanimity; having the agreement and consent of all; agreed upon without the opposition or contradiction of any; as, a unanimous opinion; a unanimous vote.
The security council had an unanimous vote protecting civilians in war torn countries.
The spelling to the word unanimous is unanimous. :D
The root of the word "unanimous" is the Latin word "unanimus," which is derived from "unus" (one) and "animus" (mind). This reflects the idea of everyone having the same opinion or being in agreement.
The newspapers were unanimous in their censure of the tax proposal. The school board censured Johnny from ever writing for the paper again.
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".
The word unanimous is not a noun; unanimous is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The adjective unanimous can be used to describe a singular or a plural noun; for example, a unanimous vote; a series of unanimousdecisions.The noun forms for the adjective unanimous are unanimousness, an uncountable noun and unanimity refers to a group of people in agreement, which can be either countable or uncountable, depending on the context.
unanimous
Unanimous is one word.
You could write the sentence with the word torrent like this: I don't know how to use the word torrent in a sentence.