immédiates
Immédiates is a plural form derived from the French adjective immédiat, meaning immediate or direct. In English, the term is uncommon outside of bilingual or specialized texts, and when it appears it may function as a borrowed noun or as part of a phrase rather than as standard English vocabulary. In such contexts, immediates can be used loosely to refer to people or things that are immediate—closest in relation, time, or sequence—or to actions or events that are direct or urgent. The usage is not standardized and often depends on the surrounding text.
Etymology and forms: The word comes from Old French immediat and Latin immediatus, both conveying directness
Usage and contexts: In historical, legal, or genealogical writing, immediates may appear as a shorthand for
See also: immediacy, immediate, immediate family, close relatives.