From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishunanimityu‧na‧nim‧i‧ty /ˌjuːnəˈnɪməti/ noun [uncountable] formalAGREEEVERYONE a state or situation of complete agreement among a group of people
Examples from the Corpus
unanimity• They voted 3-1 for unanimity, Councilman Bauser abstaining.• The longer I live, the harder I shall fight against the rule of unanimity and the veto.• Employment policies based on that kind of scientific unanimity can be implemented with confidence.• Third, Rawls' conception of the person does not lead to unanimity of moral views.• There is virtual unanimity of preference for oral teaching which might seem to overbear the possibility of opposition.