Associations to the word «Immediate»
Noun
- Progenitor
- Relief
- Annexation
- Repeal
- Insisting
- Notification
- Demand
- Supervisor
- Relative
- Disarmament
- Objective
- Assistance
- Payment
- Restitution
- Crise
- Allergy
- Deportation
- Backlash
- Embargo
- Ancestor
- Urging
- Relevance
- Impression
- Reinforcement
- Reply
- Action
- Vassal
- Intervention
- Jeopardy
- Slavery
- Surrender
- Arrest
- Bolshevik
- Perception
- Fallout
- Supervision
- Crisis
- Takeoff
- Cease
- Cause
- Beneficiary
- Armistice
- Condemnation
- Certainty
- Mobilization
- Infusion
- Confine
- Acceptance
- Swelling
- Dissolution
- Urge
- Past
- Seller
- Acclaim
- Extinction
- Utterance
- Impetus
- Follower
- Hemorrhage
- Remedy
- Creditor
- Cancellation
- Hearer
- Garrison
- Rejection
- Impulse
- Obedience
- Disposal
- Recall
- Disaster
- Spouse
- Resolution
- Deployment
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Happening right away, instantly, with no delay.
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Very close; direct or adjacent.
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Manifestly true; requiring no argument.
IMMEDIATE, adjective. (computer science) (of an instruction operand) embedded as part of the instruction itself, rather than stored elsewhere (such as a register or memory location)
IMMEDIATE FAMILIES, noun. Plural of immediate family
IMMEDIATE FAMILY, noun. A family unit consisting of a parent or parents and their children.
IMMEDIATE FAMILY, noun. A family unit consisting of all relatives living in a single household.
IMMEDIATE MODE, noun. (computer graphics) A mode in which the application is directly responsible for rendering graphics to the display, contrasting with retained mode.
Dictionary definition
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Of the present time and place; "the immediate revisions".
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Very close or connected in space or time; "contiguous events"; "immediate contact"; "the immediate vicinity"; "the immediate past".
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Having no intervening medium; "an immediate influence".
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Immediately before or after as in a chain of cause and effect; "the immediate result"; "the immediate cause of the trouble".
IMMEDIATE, adjective. Performed with little or no delay; "an immediate reply to my letter"; "a prompt reply"; "was quick to respond"; "a straightaway denial".
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.