• |
To convey from one place or person another; to
transport, remove, or cause to pass, to another place or person; as, to
transfer the laws of one country to another; to transfer suspicion. |
• |
To make over the possession or control of; to pass; to
convey, as a right, from one person to another; to give; as, the title
to land is transferred by deed. |
• |
To remove from one substance or surface to another;
as, to transfer drawings or engravings to a lithographic stone. |
• |
The act of transferring, or the state of being
transferred; the removal or conveyance of a thing from one place or
person to another. |
• |
The conveyance of right, title, or property, either real
or personal, from one person to another, whether by sale, by gift, or
otherwise. |
• |
That which is transferred. |
• |
A picture, or the like, removed from one body or ground
to another, as from wood to canvas, or from one piece of canvas to
another. |
• |
A drawing or writing printed off from one surface on
another, as in ceramics and in many decorative arts. |
• |
A soldier removed from one troop, or body of troops, and
placed in another. |
• |
A pathological process by virtue of 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. |