transference
Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++trans·fer·ence /ˈtrænsfərəns $ trænsˈfɜːr-/ AWL noun [uncountable] 1 formalMOVE something OR somebody the process of moving someone or something from one place, position, job etc to another 调任,调职;转移;转让transference of the transference of skills acquired at school to the workplace 将从学校学来的技能应用于职场2. technical the process of beginning to have the same unconscious feelings about someone in the present that you had for someone such as your parents in the past 移情Examples from the Corpus
transference• There seems little transference of application from one subject to another.• By the end of the emancipation process, the authorities lacked the wherewithal to pay for the transference of land.• Furthermore, the transference from Worcester to Lincoln of the concept of a ten-bayed concentric chapter house took place about 1225.• The whole gentile constitution made the transference of private property from father to son impossible.• Classification and measurement are not creations of man, but only the transference of natural fact from one form to another.trans·fer·ence nounChineseSyllable
someone from moving or the something process Corpus one of
transference
trans‧fer‧ence AC /ˈtrænsfərəns $ trænsˈfɜːr-/
noun [uncountable]1. formal the process of moving someone or something from one place, position, job etc to another
transference of
the transference of skills acquired at school to the workplace
2. technical the process of beginning to have the same unconscious feelings about someone in the present that you had for someone such as your parents in the past
trans‧fer‧ence AC /ˈtrænsfərəns $ trænsˈfɜːr-/
noun [uncountable]1. formal the process of moving someone or something from one place, position, job etc to anothertransference of
2. technical the process of beginning to have the same unconscious feelings about someone in the present that you had for someone such as your parents in the past