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Immediate

Immediate is an adjective with several related senses. It most commonly means occurring without delay or intervening steps, as in an immediate response or an immediate decision. It can also describe closeness in space or relation, such as the immediate vicinity or one’s immediate family, meaning those people closest to you. In addition, it can emphasize directness or firsthandness, as in immediate experience or an immediate observation. The adverb form is immediately.

Etymology and relation to other terms: Immediate comes from Middle English immediat, via Middle French and

Usage and nuances: In temporal sense, immediacy stresses the need for prompt action or the absence of

Examples: an immediate deadline; the immediate family; the immediate cause of the accident; a program that uses

See also: immediacy, immediateness, immediate value.

Latin
immediatus,
from
in-
“not”
+
medius
“middle,”
literally
“not
mediated”
and
thus
direct
or
proximal.
a
waiting
period,
often
in
urgent
or
emergency
contexts.
In
spatial
usage,
it
indicates
nearness
or
proximity.
In
causation,
the
immediate
cause
is
the
direct,
primary
factor
responsible
for
an
effect,
contrasted
with
mediating
or
distant
causes.
In
epistemology,
immediacy
refers
to
direct
or
noninferential
awareness.
In
computing
and
programming,
an
immediate
value
(or
immediate
operand)
is
a
constant
encoded
directly
in
an
instruction
rather
than
fetched
from
memory,
enabling
faster
access
and
compact
code.
an
immediate
value
in
an
instruction.