The correct form is "a unique experience".
No, "most unique" is not correct usage. "Unique" means one of a kind, so something is either unique or it is not: there cannot be different degrees of uniqueness, and something cannot be very unique or most unique. It is not uncommon to hear people say "very unique" or "most unique", but this is not correct. They should be using "unusual" if they want to use it with "very" or "most".
The unique combination of words, grammar and structure an author employs in a given work is known as the "style."
The correct spelling is "unique."
Something that's singular is unique.
Unique - meaning the sole example
A unique experience! , :P lol.
No, "most unique" is not correct usage. "Unique" means one of a kind, so something is either unique or it is not: there cannot be different degrees of uniqueness, and something cannot be very unique or most unique. It is not uncommon to hear people say "very unique" or "most unique", but this is not correct. They should be using "unusual" if they want to use it with "very" or "most".
Most careful speakers consider "unique" to be a superlative, and therefore not to be modified by any adverb, especially in writing. Something is either unique or it is not. However, the notion that a superlative may not be modified is a feature of Latin grammar, not English. Certainly Shakespeare was not afraid to modify his superlatives ( "most unkindest" is perhaps the best known example), and who are we to be more correct than the greatest writer in the English language?
This sentence is unique.
The unique combination of words, grammar and structure an author employs in a given work is known as the "style."
Whether the adjective "unique" may be modified is a bone of contention. The "rules" of grammar are not specific about it. Generally, though, it is considered weak, at the least, to use "very" with unique, and in fact you should avoid using "very" as a general thing.
style
The correct spelling is "unique."
Focus on the unique grammar of each medium and the ways in which the production variables of each medium interact with content elements
No. It is however ungrammatical if you are trying to say "She saw a derby.", however if derby is a name for someone or something unique than it it correct.
I am unable to describe his unique mode of dress.
That is a unique question.