adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a short-term/immediate impact
▪ A military attack may only have a short-term impact on terrorist activity.
an immediate ban
▪ The group has called for an immediate ban on fur farming.
an immediate goal (=that you need to achieve very soon)
▪ Our immediate goal is to cut costs.
an immediate halt
▪ The government called for an immediate halt to the fighting.
an immediate threat (=the possibility that something bad will happen very soon)
▪ The volcano erupted on Thursday but there is no immediate threat to nearby towns.
immediate steps
▪ We believe immediate steps could be taken to generate jobs.
immediate superior (=the person directly above him)
▪ He had a good working relationship with his immediate superior.
immediate (=quick and sudden)
▪ The announcement had an immediate effect on stock prices.
immediate/imminent danger (=likely to happen very soon)
▪ The passengers on the boat were not in immediate danger.
immediate/prompt/swift action
▪ The public wants immediate action to stop the terrorists.
sb's immediate family (=closest relations)
▪ What if one of your immediate family were disabled?
sb's immediate successor (=the person who has their job or position next)
▪ Valentinian's immediate successor, Petronius Maximus, was killed in 455.
sb's present/immediate concern
▪ Her two immediate concerns were to find a home and a job.
sb’s first/initial/immediate impression
▪ My first impression was that Terry’s version of the events was untrue.
sb’s first/initial/immediate reaction
▪ His first reaction was to laugh.
sb’s immediate circle (=your family and some close friends)
▪ We didn’t tell anyone what had happened outside our immediate circle.
sb’s immediate plans (=what they are going to do next)
▪ So what are your immediate plans after graduation?
sb’s immediate priority (=which must be dealt with immediately)
▪ Their immediate priority was to find somewhere to sleep that night.
sb’s immediate response
▪ When he was sentenced, his immediate response was to appeal.
the immediate environment (=the building in which you live or work, and the area very close to it)
▪ Most accidents happen to young children within the immediate environment of their home.
the immediate future (=very soon)
▪ There will be no major changes in the immediate future.
the immediate past (=the very recent past)
▪ In order to understand the present, we must look at the immediate past.
the immediate result
▪ Keep trying even if your first enquiry produces no immediate result.
the immediate/initial/short-term aim (=that you hope to achieve quickly)
▪ The immediate aim is to develop the travel business.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
more
▪ Indirect taxes can be varied more quickly and easily, taking more immediate effect, than can direct taxes.
▪ I had a more immediate problem.
▪ There were also more immediate factors that were specific to the 1990 contest.
▪ But Brown wants a more immediate impact.
▪ He believed that recession was a more immediate enemy than inflation and acted accordingly.
▪ Of more immediate concern to them was the appalling reality that the nature and tempo of operations engendered.
▪ A more immediate peril was her frail stupid desire to ask some sort of help from either Gildas or Ludens.
▪ It would seem that involuntary affirmation could be commanded only on even more immediate and urgent grounds than silence.
most
▪ The most immediate effect of all this has been the announcement of increased mortgage rates.
▪ Perhaps the most immediate challenge confronts Sen.
▪ His love and concern for his fellows was expressed in the most immediate, yet measured and sensitive way.
▪ This is what makes the most immediate impact on the hearer and arouses his empathy.
▪ The most immediate of these was the demise of Lucy Ashdown.
▪ The most immediate effect of his proposal would be to block gaming by the Salt River tribe.
▪ In 1641, the Gaels rebelled again, this time against their most immediate oppressors, the Protestant planters.
▪ The most immediate and obvious impact on group medical plans will be an increased cost to employers to provide those plans.
■ NOUN
access
▪ With no words spoken the crowd parted before the old man, allowing him immediate access to the bar.
▪ Interactive telecommunications increasingly give ordinary citizens immediate access to the major political decisions that affect their lives and property.
▪ Those unable to gain immediate access to their offices were advised to go to Guildhall, where company representatives would be waiting.
▪ As a consequence, only laboratories with immediate access to particle accelerators can carry out this sort of work.
▪ Do you require immediate access to your money?
▪ Switching on the overdrive channel, however, gave immediate access to the right stuff.
▪ Memory-the part of the computer which stores information for immediate access.
action
▪ The Treasury was prepared to accept this provided there was no commitment to immediate action.
▪ The message you conveyed to me was clear: immediate action must be taken.
▪ I became eager for immediate action.
▪ The generals and admirals said they had always been against the blockade as being too weak and now they wanted immediate action.
▪ Student welfare officers became concerned about the intensity of Life at oxford University, and in todays report they urge immediate action.
▪ But he did not propose immediate action, such as a hike in interest rates to cool the markets.
▪ They say they now want their employers to take immediate action.
▪ Following an hourlong hearing, a three-member panel of judges took no immediate action on the lawsuit.
aftermath
▪ The situation in Kabul was extremely confusing in the immediate aftermath of Najibullah's removal.
▪ The last time I had spoken to him was in the immediate aftermath of the coxless pairs final at the Atlanta Olympics.
▪ Operation Resurrection, as it was called, was first mooted in the immediate aftermath of 13 May.
▪ Something over two hundred vacancies resulted in the immediate aftermath and a trickle of further resignations followed for some years to come.
▪ Furthermore, it had been alarmed at local initiatives taken in the immediate aftermath of the June war.
▪ Impressions formed by investigators at the scene of a crime and in its immediate aftermath can not be repeated later.
▪ Beyond 1945 and its immediate aftermath was the outline of a future permeated with hope.
▪ In the immediate aftermath of annexation or conquest Euric's rule was far from pleasant.
area
▪ Try to think more positively about walks, and wake up to new opportunities outside your immediate area.
▪ Police evacuated the immediate area and began a meticulous search for other bombs after the second explosion.
▪ Outside the immediate area of commercialization, however, another phenomenon appeared.
▪ Sparta offers delivery in the immediate area.
▪ Easily Accessible: Downhayes is set in an area of small working farms with few public footpaths in the immediate area.
▪ Maureen searched the immediate area, hoping to find the missing limb, but no luck.
▪ The few burrows in this immediate area had never been allowed to develop fully.
▪ The great majority of non-employees who commit crimes against business will live in the immediate area.
attention
▪ It is a demand that begins to override the others, and to require immediate attention.
▪ It was true that a major problem had just cropped up which demanded immediate attention.
▪ In fact, Green Chemistry is published so attractively that it catches immediate attention of the readers.
▪ When he put down the Moscow Dynamos and started to talk about himself, he got immediate attention.
▪ But because he didn't receive immediate attention, he's likely to remain partially lame the rest of his life.
▪ Surely there are more important illegal issues requiring immediate attention, i.e. assaults on the aged and small children.
cause
▪ It is that representation in my brain that is the immediate cause of my actions.
▪ The immediate cause of last week's blackouts was a large power plant suddenly going offline in Northern California.
▪ Its immediate cause resides in two distinct but related issues.
▪ In the last part of the poem he tells them that he has only discussed the immediate cause of diarrhea.
▪ As to these immediate causes, the choice is straight forward.
▪ The immediate cause of his first campaign was to support the town of Lodi, which had been subject to control by Milan.
▪ The immediate cause for concern is that changes in the Sun's diameter are linked with changes in its heat output.
comment
▪ A spokeswoman for President-elect Bush, said his press office was on holiday and had no immediate comment.
▪ The Pentagon had no immediate comment on the letter.
▪ There's been no immediate comment from the Gloucestershire Royal Hospital.
▪ The university had no immediate comment, spokesman Bill Gordon said.
▪ BAn Arco spokesman had no immediate comment.
▪ Police officials in San Francisco had no immediate comment on the development.
▪ Fokker declined immediate comment on teh Daimler move.
concern
▪ My immediate concern on that first morning in Punta Arenas was to learn all I could about the ship.
▪ Of more immediate concern to them was the appalling reality that the nature and tempo of operations engendered.
▪ Your immediate concern is how to make yourself the candidate most likely to succeed!
▪ The more immediate concern, namely, self-preservation, had made friends and benefactors of their former enemies.
▪ Our more immediate concern in this section is with measurement as understood within variable analysis.
▪ My immediate concern is that the tone of your coverage was very negative, speculative, and highly opinionated.
▪ A more immediate concern is the danger that a monumental scientific advance could be commercialised.
▪ The management of such a system was of immediate concern to the school, and support-staff involvement was considered necessary.
danger
▪ To Dorcas's amazement, now that the immediate danger was over, she seemed to be quite enjoying it.
▪ Its main action is to prepare us for short-term, immediate danger.
▪ It was clear, even from the heavily edited pictures, that the lives of the police were not in immediate danger.
▪ The judge said there was no evidence that the brothers were in immediate danger.
▪ But the most chilling deduction from the fact of Bill Sweet's murder was the immediate danger to Jacqui.
▪ They are probably the No. 1 immediate danger.
▪ It is sufficient to know that the immediate danger from the rear has been cancelled out.
▪ After three hours Hsu Fu was hauled out of immediate danger, but only just.
effect
▪ However limited its immediate effects, the ideology of Enlightened Despotism was important in the long term.
▪ It advanced the use of shock to cure anything by scaring it out of your body, with immediate effect.
▪ Indirect taxes can be varied more quickly and easily, taking more immediate effect, than can direct taxes.
▪ The group said it was acting quickly because it feared that the new law would have an immediate effect on the Internet.
▪ On Feb. 20 the Volkskammer approved a new electoral law to have immediate effect.
▪ The most immediate effect of his proposal would be to block gaming by the Salt River tribe.
▪ The immediate effect of these changes can be easily exaggerated.
▪ You need to determine whether the trend will extend beyond the immediate effect of the earnings statement.
environment
▪ In architectural terms, it suggests that a design should not represent an international style but should respond to its immediate environment.
▪ A vague feeling of disorientation or strangeness relative to the immediate environment. 3.
▪ Is there something different about your immediate environment which may be causing you to feel unsettled?
▪ The patient's cells have reacted to a trace of a protein in the food, or present in the immediate environment.
▪ In the current series she moves out of the body and into its immediate environment, the domestic world.
▪ This year the theme is the conservation of monuments and their immediate environment.
family
▪ The tumult of war had undoubtedly touched Leonard, though his immediate family were spared its direct horrors.
▪ Cancer claimed the lives of her parents and hit 14 of 17 people in her immediate family.
▪ Her husband and her immediate family live in Moscow.
▪ Fidela Kirstein died in 1991; the couple had no children, and Kirstein left no other immediate family.
▪ The brotherhood of man did not end with the immediate family of siblings at which it began.
▪ My own camp was wedged between the two branches of my immediate family.
▪ This impetus originated mainly from two previously noted sources: the user's immediate family and the police.
▪ Oh, and I should probably start with your immediate family.
future
▪ If any sector commands attention for the immediate future of food, it is the women.
▪ It seems reasonable to assume that he used his science to determine the probable course of the history of the immediate future.
▪ While Stavrogin never gets to see Tikhon, the immediate future holds murder in store for Shatov.
▪ Major changes, such as abolition of the program, appear unlikely in the immediate future.
▪ The prospects for the immediate future are bleak.
▪ By that time Ed had some fairly definite plans for his immediate future.
▪ Now for the immediate future, and the various centenary celebrations which begin this weekend.
▪ Now in his second major-league spring training Taylor is pretty sure of his immediate future.
impact
▪ I too enlarged the material in Sur Incises, and the work had an immediate impact without my abandoning anything at all.
▪ But the United States has demurred, lobbying only for senior positions that can have an immediate impact on U.S. interests.
▪ Yet the immediate impact of the statute was much less dramatic than this longer-term picture might suggest.
▪ With those expectations already incorporated in investors' thinking, Greenspan's remarks had only a small immediate impact on financial markets.
▪ The immediate impact of this event was to dissuade other prelates from publicly defending the king.
▪ There are few defensive backs who are expected to make immediate impact.
▪ Few articles can have made such a great and immediate impact on both the theoretical and practical planes.
▪ But Brown wants a more immediate impact.
need
▪ Edward accepted the immediate need to support Helen's decision and maintain Mrs Noble's good opinion of him.
▪ It is not problem-solving oriented; and very often it has no relevance to the immediate needs of the society.
▪ Users need not work through the exercises sequentially, but can choose according to immediate need.
▪ If you tried to deal with all these immediate needs you were a lost man.
▪ The immediate need is to expand the entire system.
▪ She saw only the immediate need of a particular individual and tried to meet it then and there.
▪ The statute requires, however, not a threat of immediate danger, but rather an immediate need to act to protect.
▪ Not withstanding this, we have an immediate need to protect our property from the moment the slate falls.
neighbours
▪ On the left were our immediate neighbours, the Guttentags.
▪ Some of the players have short-term and perhaps ill-judged designs on the territory of their immediate neighbours.
▪ Steve's immediate neighbours are terrific.
▪ In Figure 3, the basic tree in the centre is surrounded by 8 of its 18 immediate neighbours in genetic space.
▪ Its immediate neighbours see it as a bully.
▪ Indeed it would be just as probable as a jump from insect to one of its immediate neighbours.
plan
▪ Regional health authority officers insist they have no immediate plans to look at the possibility of merging districts.
▪ Though ValuJet has no immediate plans to upgrade, it is thinking about the future.
▪ At first, he appeared to have no immediate plans to take on the armed forces.
▪ He has no immediate plans to retire, having reached a peak in his career.
▪ Now he says he has no immediate plans for exit and has not ruled out a trade sale.
▪ None of the banks has any immediate plan to change its rates.
▪ Jim's spokesman Cliff Elson said there were no immediate plans for divorce.
▪ The port authority says it has no immediate plans for developing more of Seal Sands.
predecessor
▪ This, at least, suggested the possibility of other lands beyond those recognized by his immediate predecessor Hecataeus.
▪ Politician, historian and writer of many biographies, he was our immediate predecessor, yielding the Green Study to me.
▪ In some ways, however, Alexander was better prepared for the throne than either of his immediate predecessors.
problem
▪ The immediate problem, however, lies in implementing such a system.
▪ I had a more immediate problem.
▪ But Jack Mason had solved the immediate problem for me.
▪ Any threat to the vision in one eye is far more serious than the immediate problem.
▪ The immediate problem for parents is what to tell them.
▪ He seems to be suggesting the endowment as a quick solution to an immediate problem, but he knows better.
▪ It should be particularistic and small scale and concerned with the immediate problems of a given institutional context.
▪ This is not an immediate problem in the hectic process of establishing the great new structure.
reaction
▪ His immediate reaction was that there was an oil leak.
▪ The State Department had no immediate reaction.
▪ My immediate reaction, whether it be a man or a woman, is to think the worst of them.
▪ The Republican National Committee had no immediate reaction to the Democrats' changes.
▪ They need time to digest radical change, otherwise their immediate reaction is negative.
▪ If he had a flaw, it was that he lacked the ability to question his own immediate reactions.
▪ The children's immediate reaction was a sense of relief at having arrived somewhere.
▪ To keep everyone happy press officer David Begg, from Glasgow, recorded immediate reactions.
response
▪ As an immediate response to the killing the police detained more than 200 people in the Zawiya al-Hamra district of Cairo.
▪ The immediate responses to complaints made by Justice Department officials in the new administration seemed cold-blooded and callous.
▪ His immediate response was to appeal.
▪ Until recently, courts have resisted self-defence arguments unless the woman committed the crime in immediate response to battering.
▪ His immediate response was to arrest 150 people for suspected links with Hamas's military wing, Izzadin el-Qassam.
▪ David Blunkett's immediate response was absolutely right.
▪ At times, these images may be so powerful as to demand an immediate response.
▪ The immediate response was that Lewis had not deserved to lose and would be exercising his right to an immediate rematch.
result
▪ One immediate result of my departure from Berkeley was my giving up my flat by the school and going back to London.
▪ The immediate result of the campus power struggle was that Knickerbocker was asked to leave at the end of the 1936-37 year.
▪ I am happy to say that the change brought immediate results.
▪ Thus the immediate result of a K / impact anywhere on Earth would be wildfire ignition over the entire planet.
▪ The immediate result is a confrontation between an angry and bewildered Pharaoh and Abraham.
▪ The Czech coup had another immediate result with immense long-range consequences.
▪ If you decide to follow any of these suggestions, don't expect immediate results.
▪ What was more important than immediate results, I figured, was my education.
superior
▪ Restoring a damaged relationship with a superior Your most important working relationship is with your immediate superior.
▪ Can teachers be disciplined for publicly criticizing their immediate superiors?
▪ The managers generally failed to take advantage of a potentially valuable resource, their immediate superiors.
▪ Clint Eastwood is usually threatened with dismissal in his detective movies, sometimes because his immediate superior is on the take.
threat
▪ My tardiness prompted an immediate threat of a fine, but it never materialised.
▪ Officials said there was no immediate threat of tsunami, a seismic ocean wave, which could be catastrophic to the area.
▪ The immediate threat to the West may be inflation; the spectre in the shadows is deflation.
▪ The most immediate threat is to bird life.
▪ Although the gunman had her pinned down he wasn't her immediate threat.
▪ The creation of States posed an immediate threat to the freedom of action of lesser rulers.
▪ It claimed, however, that there appeared to be no immediate threat to humans or the environment.
▪ The most immediate threat remains the current drought and the danger of a flood of refugees.
use
▪ Better have some O neg. sent up for immediate use as well.
▪ Most significantly, Mirror papers introduced modern printing techniques, processed photos locally for immediate use and speeded up the presses.
▪ While this step awaits technical advances, cleaner fuels for cars and lorries, such as methanol, are urged for immediate use.
▪ Carry the hand far enough forwards for immediate use as a reverse punch.
▪ The name and date were inserted in a decorative framework, this probably being kept standing for immediate use when sightseers arrived.
▪ Why is it that most women will not go out of the house without bags loaded with objects of no immediate use?
▪ The entries were not much immediate use to him.
▪ Sums of money not required for immediate use can be put into a deposit account on which the bank will pay interest.
vicinity
▪ When lines cross, focus upon the near line throws the far line out of focus in the immediate vicinity of the cross.
▪ As they fire adenosine is produced and ends up floating around in the immediate vicinity of the neuron.
▪ Unfamiliar environment Familiarity with an environment makes it less hazardous; for example people adjust spatially to avoid objects in their immediate vicinity.
▪ It allowed us to discuss her even when we were within her immediate vicinity.
▪ In the immediate vicinity, sensitive monitors relay readings back to the central control room.
▪ Both mechanisms, however, cause indiscriminate damage in the immediate vicinity fo the neutrophil.
▪ The stop serves a wider catchment than the immediate vicinity of West Richmond Street.
▪ He is still in the immediate vicinity.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
with immediate effect/with effect from
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ My immediate reaction was shock and horror.
▪ One immediate worry is money.
▪ Our immediate concern was to stop the fire spreading.
▪ Several homes in the immediate area of the volcano were evacuated.
▪ The immediate needs of the refugees are for warm clothing and clean drinking water.
▪ The benefits of the program have been neither immediate nor obvious.
▪ The UN demanded the immediate release of the hostages.
▪ This letter requires your immediate attention.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But the immediate consequence of the prohibition of women in trading was clear to all: It kept women farther from power.
▪ His love and concern for his fellows was expressed in the most immediate, yet measured and sensitive way.
▪ Inside, Sammler felt an immediate descent; his heart sinking.
▪ Often such complex layouts lead to immediate confusion, but the manual gets you off the ground with some helpful suggested settings.
▪ Qiao Shi, the intelligence chief who had abstained in the martial law vote earlier, endorsed an immediate army crackdown.
▪ The group said it was acting quickly because it feared that the new law would have an immediate effect on the Internet.