[f. as prec. + -ER1. See also TRANSFERER, -OR.] One who or that which transfers.
1753. Hanway, Trav. (1762), II. I. vii. 35. These transfers are made by the personal appearance of the transferrer.
1803. W. Taylor, in Ann. Rev., I. 744. Compelling him to prove only against the immediate transferrer of the bill.
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.
1860. H. Spencer, Soc. Organism, in Westm. Rev., Jan., 105. A system of vessels which continues ever after to be the transferrer of nutriment.
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.