释义 |
im·me·di·a·cy \ə̇ˈmēdēəsē, -si, chiefly Brit -mējəs- or -mēdyəs-\ noun 1. : the quality or state of being immediate; usually : freedom from or absence of an intervening medium : direct presence : directness, contiguity < the immediacy of personal experience — London Calling > < television has on occasion furnished a startling immediacy … to news reports — F.L.Mott > — opposed to mediacy 2. : something that is immediate < the immediacy of our need > — usually used in plural < the immediacies of life > 3. : the state or relation under feudal law of being immediate lord or vassal 4. a. : the direct content of consciousness or consciousness itself as distinguished from what consciousness represents or mediates a knowledge of b. : direct awareness or presentations of sense as contrasted with what is added by memory and association or thought c. : the quality of something that is self-evident or intuited as contrasted with something that is arrived at by thought or reason |