immediate vs unescapable

immediate

adj
  • Manifestly true; requiring no argument. 

  • An artillery fire mission modifier for to types of fire mission to denote an immediate need for fire: Immediate smoke, all guns involved must reload smoke and fire. Immediate suppression, all guns involved fire the rounds currently loaded and then switch to high explosive with impact fused (unless fuses are specified). 

  • Very close; direct or adjacent. 

  • Happening right away, instantly, with no delay. 

  • Embedded as part of the instruction itself, rather than stored elsewhere (such as a register or memory location). 

  • Used to denote that a transmission is urgent. 

unescapable

adj
  • Impossible to avoid or escape, not escapable; ineluctable. 

How often have the words immediate and unescapable occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )