transfer ●●●●●
Oxford 5000 vocabulary |B1|ACADEMIC vocabularySPEAKING vocabularyWRITING vocabularyIELTS vocabulary trans‧fer /trænsˈfɜː $ -ˈfɜːr/ verb (past tense and past participle transferred, present participle transferring)
trans‧fer /ˈtrænsfɜː $ -fɜːr/ noun
منتقل کردن، انتقال دادن
نقل کردن، انتقال، انتقال (در یادگیری)، واگذار کردن، واگذاری، تحویل، نقل، سند انتقال، انتقالی، علوم مهندسی: سند انتقال یا واگذاری، کامپیوتر: انتقال دادن، قانون فقه: سند انتقال و واگذاری، حواله، روانشناسی: انتقال، بازرگانی: حواله، انتقال دادن، علوم نظامی: تغییر سمت دادن لوله
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Advanced Persian Dictionary مهندسی صنایع: فروش/خرید/تدارکات: انتقاد
الکترونیک: انتقال، واگذاری، انتقال دادن،
کامپیوتر: احاله، انتقال،
فقهی: انتقال، حواله،
تجارت خارجی: انتقال دادن، واگذار کردن، نقل کردن انتقال، واگذاری، نقل، سند انتقال یا واگذاری،
علوم مهندسی: واگذار کردن، انتقال دادن، نقل کردن انتقال، واگذاری، سند انتقال و واگذاری حواله،
حقوق: انتقال، انتقال دادن،
بازرگانی: پهلو - رفت،
علوم دریایی: انتقال، انتقال دادن، منتقل کردن، تغییر سمت دادن لوله، حرکت سمتی لوله حرکت در سمت،
علوم نظامی: انتقال،
در یادگیری، : روانشناسی: ورابری، ورابردن، انتقال دادن، واگذار کردن، منتقل کردن، انتقال، واگذاری، تحویل، نقل، سند انتقال، انتقالی
[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary ▲
Synonyms & Related Words transfer[verb]Synonyms:- move, change, convey, hand over, pass on, relocate, shift, transplant, transport, transpose
[noun]Synonyms:- move, change, handover, relocation, shift, transference, translation, transmission, transposition
Related Words: carry,
convey,
relocate,
transmit [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary I. trans‧fer1 S3 W2 AC /trænsˈfɜː $ -ˈfɜːr/
verb (
past tense and past participle transferred,
present participle transferring)
[
Word Family: noun:
transfer,
transference;
verb:
transfer]
[
Date: 1300-1400;
Language: Latin;
Origin: transferre, from ferre 'to carry']
1. MOVE TO DIFFERENT PLACE ETC [intransitive and transitive] to move from one place, school, job etc to another, or to make someone do this, especially within the same organization
transfer (from something) to something Swod transferred from MI6 to the Security Service.transfer somebody (from something) to something They’re transferring him to a special unit at Great Ormond Street Hospital. You’ll be transferred to the Birmingham office.2. PUT SOMETHING IN DIFFERENT PLACE [intransitive and transitive] formal to move from one place to another, or to move something from one place to another
transfer (from something) to something The exhibition transfers to York City Art Gallery on 23rd January.transfer something (from something) to something Transfer the meat to warm plates.3. SPORTS PERSON [transitive] to sell a sports player to another team:
He was transferred for a fee of £8 million.4. MONEY [transitive] to move money from one account or institution to another
transfer something (from something) to something I’d like to transfer $500 to my checking account.5. transfer your affections/loyalty/allegiance etc to change from loving or supporting one person to loving or supporting a different one
6. SKILL/IDEA/QUALITY [intransitive and transitive] if a skill, idea, or quality transfers from one situation to another, or if you transfer it, it can be used in the new situation:
Ideas that work well in one school often don’t transfer well to another.7. transfer power/responsibility/control (to somebody) to officially give power etc to another person or organization:
The ageing president is preparing to transfer power to his son.8. PHONE [transitive] to connect the call of someone who has telephoned you to someone else’s telephone so that that person can speak to them:
Hold on one moment while I transfer your call.9. PROPERTY [transitive] law to officially give property or land to someone else
10. TRAVEL [intransitive and transitive] to change from one bus, plane etc to another while you are travelling, or arrange for someone to do this:
You will be met on arrival at the airport and transferred to your hotel.11. INFORMATION/MUSIC [transitive] to copy recorded information, music etc from one system to another:
Transfer the files onto floppy disk.12. DISEASE [transitive] if a disease is transferred from one person or animal to another, the second person or animal begins to have the disease
Synonym : passtransfer something (from somebody/something) to somebody/something It is unlikely that the disease will be transferred from animals to humans.—transferable adjective:
transferable skills—transferability /trænsˌfɜːrəˈbɪləti, trænsˌfɜːrəˈbɪlɪti/
noun [uncountable] [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. trans‧fer2 W2 AC /ˈtrænsfɜː $ -fɜːr/
noun [
Word Family: noun:
transfer,
transference;
verb:
transfer]
1. a) [uncountable and countable] the process by which someone or something moves or is moved from one place, job etc to another
transfer of the transfer of assets within a group of companiestransfer to Penny’s applied for a transfer to head office. electronic data transfer b) [countable] someone or something that has been moved in this way
2. transfer of power a process by which the control of a country is taken from one person or group and given to another:
the transfer of power to a civilian government3. [countable] the act of changing from one bus, aircraft etc to another while travelling:
Getting there often means a couple of transfers on a bus line.4. [countable] especially British English a drawing, pattern etc that can be stuck or printed onto a surface
Synonym : decal American English5. [countable] especially American English a ticket that allows a passenger to change from one bus, train etc to another without paying more money
[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocations transfer noun ADJ. massive The war caused a massive transfer of population.
efficient, smooth, successful the smooth transfer of power to the new government
net There has been a net transfer of lower-paid people away from the inner cities.
permanent Her boss recommended a permanent transfer overseas.
direct Employees are paid by direct transfer to a bank account.
data, information, knowledge | land, property | population | resource | technology | file, multimedia, software | inter-company, inter-hospital, etc. | bank, capital, cash, credit, financial, money, share, stock | electronic, telegraphic | embryo, gene | charge, electron, energy, heat, nuclear, thermal | close-season, free, 15-million-pound, etc. (all in football)
VERB + TRANSFER make Only the owner can make a transfer of goods.
give sb His club have given him a free transfer. TRANSFER + VERB take place TRANSFER + NOUN deal, fee, list, payment, price, system (all in football) PREP. ~ between the transfer of property between private buyers
~ from, ~ to [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
transfer verb ADV. carefully | directly Skills cannot be transferred directly from a trainer to a trainee.
easily Data is easily transferred electronically.
successfully | merely, simply | immediately | quickly, rapidly | gradually | eventually | temporarily | formally Sovereignty was formally transferred on December 27.
automatically | electronically | abroad, back transferring assets abroad VERB + TRANSFER agree to | refuse to PREP. across/between Can the disease be transferred across species?
from, into She transferred the sauce into a china jug.
onto, to [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲