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A word meaning better than perfect is 'pluperfect':

'She has built a reputation as a pluperfect officer.'

'He speaks with faultless, pluperfect diction.'

The term should be used with care; many would argue that 'perfect' is as far as one can go.

A similar case is 'unique', frequently expressed as, 'He's a very unique example,'; 'This style of art is rather unique,', where, although it is correct to qualify 'unique', many think of it as meaning 'one of a kind'.

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15y ago

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