[f. as prec. + -ER1. See also TRANSFERER, -OR.] One who or that which transfers.

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1753.  Hanway, Trav. (1762), II. I. vii. 35. These transfers are made by the personal appearance of the transferrer.

2

1803.  W. Taylor, in Ann. Rev., I. 744. Compelling him to prove only against the immediate transferrer of the bill.

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1825.  J. Nicholson, Operat. Mechanic, 470. The impression when taken off the plate is given to a girl, called a cutter, who cuts it into shapes, and hands the parts to a woman (the transferrer), who puts them on the biscuit.

4

1860.  H. Spencer, Soc. Organism, in Westm. Rev., Jan., 105. A system of vessels which continues ever after to be the transferrer of nutriment.

5

1862.  Catal. Internat. Exhib., II. X. 17. This direct transferrer, invented by Mr. George Glover, is now generally used in the gradation of gas-holders for testing meters.

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