: a mythical, usually white animal generally depicted with the body and head of a horse with long flowing mane and tail and a single often spiraled horn in the middle of the forehead
b
: an animal mentioned in the Bible that is usually considered an aurochs, a one-horned rhinoceros, or an antelope
2
: something unusual, rare, or unique
There's the elusive unicorn: headphones that do everything well and work in any situation.—Damon Darlin
In Washington, D.C., truth is now a veritable unicorn.—Marilyn M. Singleton
… he's like baseball's version of a unicorn—a true two-way player.—Tony Paul
3
business: a start-up that is valued at one billion dollars or more
… a tech unicorn in Michigan is even more of a rarity, far from Silicon Valley's investor echo chamber.—Scott Martin
The blockbuster initial public offering is expected to kick off a revitalized market this year, encouraging IPO debuts by other unicorns, the privately held start-ups whose hefty venture capital funds have allowed them to avoid Wall Street and the legal requirements of a public offering.—Jon Swartz
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The unicorns in this film are a lot more vengeful and organized.—Npr Staff, NPR, 5 Apr. 2025 Farfetch, which Neves launched in 2008, delivered that growth, becoming one of the U.K.’s few unicorns with a $1 billion-plus valuation which, as the years passed, hit $24 billion.—Samantha Conti, Footwear News, 3 Apr. 2025 What starts off as a fantastical find quickly turns into a gory horror movie as the unicorn’s parents come knocking.—Savannah Salazar, Vulture, 29 Mar. 2025 That versatility is, in a lot of ways, the true beauty of unicorns.—Sarah Shachat, IndieWire, 28 Mar. 2025 See All Example Sentences for unicorn
Word History
Etymology
Middle English unicorne, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin unicornis, from Latin, having one horn, from uni- + cornu horn — more at horn
: an imaginary animal generally represented with the body and head of a horse and a single horn in the middle of the forehead
Etymology
Middle English unicorne "unicorn," from early French unicorne (same meaning), derived from Latin unicornis "having one horn," from uni- "one" and cornu "horn" — related to cornentry 3, universe
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