Transfer
61transfer — 1. Process of removal or transferral. 2. A condition in which learning in one situation influences learning in another situation; a carry over of learning that may be positive in effect, as when learning one …
62transfer to — phr verb Transfer to is used with these nouns as the object: ↑patient …
63Transfer — Trans·fe̲r der; s, s; 1 geschr; die Weitergabe, der Austausch von etwas: der technologische Transfer zwischen den führenden Industriestaaten || K: Informationstransfer, Technologietransfer, Wissenstransfer 2 Ökon; die Zahlung meist größerer… …
64transfer — • överlåtelse, avträdelse, transfer, transport …
65transfer — [14] Transfer comes via Old French transferer from Latin trānsferre ‘carry across’. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix trāns ‘across’ (a distant relative of English through) and ferre ‘carry’ (a relative of English bear, birth,… …
66transfer — v. Getting off yor butt and going somwhere else. Used by posh, well off people. Class, we re going to transfer down to room 22 …
67transfer — v. Getting off yor butt and going somwhere else. Used by posh, well off people. Class, we re going to transfer down to room 22 …
68transfer — the forcible deportation of a population Those made to move do not go voluntarily to another place: Ze evi, 62, is an advocate of transfer, the euphemism employed by the supporters for the removal from Israel and the Occupied… …
69transfer — v 1. convey, move, remove, take, carry, transport, cart, haul, deliver, send, forward, transmit; mail, post, ship, freight, truck. 2. transmit, hand down, pass on or along; delegate, assign, devolve, shift responsibility, U. S. Inf. pass the… …
70transfer — trans•fer v. [[t]trænsˈfɜr, ˈtræns fər[/t]] n. [[t]ˈtræns fər[/t]] v. ferred, fer•ring, n. 1) to convey or remove from one place, person, or position to another 2) to cause to pass from one person to another, as thought or power; transmit 3) law… …