erron. transferal. [f. as prec. + -AL: cf. conferral.] The action or fact of transferring; transfer, transference.
1863. Cornh. Mag., VII. 388. The transferal of Greenwich mean time into sidereal, and vice versâ.
1870. E. Mulford, The Nation, x. 169. All acquisition of territory, by purchase or conquest, is by the United States alone, and the immediate transferal is to the United States, as in Louisiana and Alaska. Ibid., xiv. 262. The individual cannot transfer to the nation that which is involved in his vocation. Since it is in the realization of personality, there can be no transferal of it, but the individual is to work in it, and to work it out.
1875. Whitney, Life Lang., v. 78. The old material of language is constantly suffering extension and transferral to new uses.