transfer | |
1. v. To move or pass from one place, person or thing to another. | |
to transfer the laws of one country to another; to transfer suspicion | |
2. v. To convey the impression of (something) from one surface to another. | |
to transfer drawings or engravings to a lithographic stone | |
3. v. (intransitive) To be or become transferred. | |
4. v. (transitive, legal) To arrange for something to belong to or be officially controlled by somebody else. | |
The title to land is transferred by deed. | |
5. n. The act of conveying or removing something from one place, person or thing to another. | |
6. n. An instance of conveying or removing from one place, person or thing to another; a transferal. | |
7. n. A design conveyed by contact from one surface to another; a heat transfer. | |
8. n. A soldier removed from one troop, or body of troops, and placed in another. | |
9. n. (medicine) A pathological process by which a unilateral morbid condition on being abolished on one side of the body makes its appearance in the corresponding region upon the other side. | |
10. n. (genetics) The conveying of genetic material from one cell to another. | |