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transferable

/verb trans-fur, trans-fer; noun, adjective trans-fer/US // verb trænsˈfɜr, ˈtræns fər; noun, adjective ˈtræns fər //

可转让,可转让的,可转移的,可转移

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    trans·ferred, trans·fer·ring.

    • : to convey or remove from one place, person, etc., to another: He transferred the package from one hand to the other.
    • : to cause to pass from one person to another, as thought, qualities, or power; transmit.
    • : Law. to make over the possession or control of: to transfer a title to land.
    • : to imprint, impress, or otherwise convey from one surface to another.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    trans·ferred, trans·fer·ring.

    • : to remove oneself from one place to another: to transfer from the New York office to London.
    • : to withdraw from one school, college, or the like, and enter another: I transferred from Rutgers to Tulane.
    • : to be moved from one place to another: to transfer to overseas duty.
    • : to change by means of a transfer from one bus, train, or the like, to another.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a means or system of transferring.
    • : an act of transferring.
    • : the fact of being transferred.
    • : a point or place for transferring.
    • : a ticket entitling a passenger to continue a journey on another bus, train, or the like.
    • : a drawing, design, pattern, or the like, that is or may be transferred from one surface to another, usually by direct contact.
    • : a person who changes or is changed from one college, military unit, business department, etc., to another.
    • : Law. a conveyance, by sale, gift, or otherwise, of real or personal property, to another.
    • : Finance. the act of having the ownership of a stock or registered bond transferred.
    • : Also called transfer of training. Psychology. the positive or negative influence of prior learning on subsequent learning.Compare generalization.
    • : Also called language transfer. Linguistics. the application of native-language rules in attempted performance in a second language, in some cases resulting in deviations from target-language norms and in other cases facilitating second-language acquisition.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of, relating to, or involving transfer payments.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • They were all facing the same issues, and by working together, we thought it could be an interesting way to accelerate, to transfer the know-how, to avoid any mistakes done already.

  • Remove the preheated pot from the oven and carefully transfer your dough into it, handling it as little as possible and using the parchment paper to carefully lift and lower it in.

  • The university’s medical center often receives transfers from across the area because it provides specialty services other hospitals don’t, including reattaching limbs, specialized burn care and leukemia treatment.

  • Moreover, the EDPB makes it clear that there very well may not be any supplementary measures to cover a particular transfer in legal glory.

  • Miami transfer QB D’Eriq King is fashioning a true 21st-century college football careerKing also has been one of this season’s most inspirational stories.

  • Ergo, the book becomes a multiplatform object transferable wherever the reader wants to go.

  • They were transferable, and were actually transferred to this side upon which the invaders disembarked.

  • It is non-transferable because it is based upon the possession of certain qualifications peculiar to the permittee.

  • The grazing use of the National Forest lands is therefore only a personal and non-transferable privilege.

  • The best advice is mere theory until applied, and experience in the practical things of life is not transferable.

  • He will not fall into the error of supposing that experience is altogether a transferable commodity.