slovo | definícia |
transference (encz) | transference,přemístění n: Zdeněk Brož |
Transference (gcide) | Transference \Trans"fer*ence\, n.
The act of transferring; conveyance; passage; transfer.
[1913 Webster] |
transference (wn) | transference
n 1: (psychoanalysis) the process whereby emotions are passed on
or displaced from one person to another; during
psychoanalysis the displacement of feelings toward others
(usually the parents) is onto the analyst
2: transferring ownership [syn: transfer, transference]
3: the act of transfering something from one form to another;
"the transfer of the music from record to tape suppressed
much of the background noise" [syn: transfer,
transference] |
TRANSFERENCE (bouvier) | TRANSFERENCE, Scotch law. The name of an action by which a suit, which was
pending at the time the parties died, is transferred from the deceased to
his representatives, in the same condition in which it stood formerly. If it
be the pursuer who is dead, the action is called a transference active; if
the defender, it is a transference passive. Ersk. Prin. B. 4, t. 1, n. 32.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
countertransference (encz) | countertransference, n: |
thought transference (encz) | thought transference, n: |
Thought transference (gcide) | Thought transference \Thought transference\
Telepathy.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.] |
Transference (gcide) | Transference \Trans"fer*ence\, n.
The act of transferring; conveyance; passage; transfer.
[1913 Webster] |
countertransference (wn) | countertransference
n 1: the psychoanalyst's displacement of emotion onto the
patient or more generally the psychoanalyst's emotional
involvement in the therapeutic interaction |
thought transference (wn) | thought transference
n 1: apparent communication from one mind to another without
using sensory perceptions [syn: telepathy, {thought
transference}] |
TRANSFERENCE (bouvier) | TRANSFERENCE, Scotch law. The name of an action by which a suit, which was
pending at the time the parties died, is transferred from the deceased to
his representatives, in the same condition in which it stood formerly. If it
be the pursuer who is dead, the action is called a transference active; if
the defender, it is a transference passive. Ersk. Prin. B. 4, t. 1, n. 32.
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