Adverb
so as to be unique
in an unambiguous manner
Source: WordNethe could determine uniquely the properties of the compound Source: Internet
she stated her intentions unequivocally Source: Internet
A nonempty subset W of a vector space V that is closed under addition and scalar multiplication (and therefore contains the 0-vector of V) is called a linear subspace of V, or simply a subspace of V, when the ambient space is unambiguously a vector space. Source: Internet
Any given point in a celestial coordinate system can unambiguously be assigned to a single constellation (but see Argo Navis ). Source: Internet
Before the 21st century, only five popes unambiguously resigned with historical certainty, all between the 10th and 15th centuries. Source: Internet
Because all five-digit integers starting with "251" fall within our final range, it is one of the three-digit prefixes we could transmit that would unambiguously convey our original message. Source: Internet