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   The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.  2000.
 
range
 
PRONUNCIATION:  rnj
NOUN:1a. Extent of perception, knowledge, experience, or ability. b. The area or sphere in which an activity takes place. c. The full extent covered: within the range of possibilities. 2a. An amount or extent of variation: a wide price range. b. Music The gamut of tones that a voice or instrument is capable of producing. Also called compass. 3a. The maximum extent or distance limiting operation, action, or effectiveness, as of a projectile, aircraft, radio signal, or sound. b. The maximum distance that can be covered by a vehicle with a specified payload before its fuel supply is exhausted. c. The distance between a projectile weapon and its target. 4. A place equipped for practice in shooting at targets. 5. Aerospace A testing area at which rockets and missiles are launched and tracked. 6. An extensive area of open land on which livestock wander and graze. 7. The geographic region in which a plant or animal normally lives or grows. 8. The act of wandering or roaming over a large area. 9. Mathematics The set of all values a given function may take on. 10. Statistics The difference or interval between the smallest and largest values in a frequency distribution. 11. A class, rank, or order: The candidate had broad support from the lower ranges of the party. 12. abbr. Ra. An extended group or series, especially a row or chain of mountains. 13. One of a series of double-faced bookcases in a library stack room. 14. abbr. R A north-south strip of townships, each six miles square, numbered east and west from a specified meridian in a U.S. public land survey. 15. A stove with spaces for cooking a number of things at the same time.
VERB:Inflected forms: ranged, rang·ing, rang·es
TRANSITIVE VERB:1. To arrange or dispose in a particular order, especially in rows or lines. 2. To assign to a particular category; classify. 3. To align (a gun, for example) with a target. 4a. To determine the distance of (a target). b. To be capable of reaching (a maximum distance). 5. To pass over or through (an area or region). 6. To turn (livestock) onto an extensive area of open land for grazing. 7. Nautical To uncoil (an anchor cable) on deck so the anchor may descend easily.
INTRANSITIVE VERB:1. To vary within specified limits: ages that ranged from two to five. 2. To extend in a particular direction: a river that ranges to the east. 3. To extend or lie in the same direction: “Whatsoever comes athwart his affection ranges evenly with mine” (Shakespeare). 4. To pass over or through an area or region in or as if in exploration. 5. To wander freely; roam. 6. To live or grow within a particular region.
ETYMOLOGY:Middle English, row, rank, from Old French, from rangier, to put in a row, from rang, reng, line, of Germanic origin. See sker-2 in Appendix I.
SYNONYMS:range, ambit, compass, orbit, purview, reach, scope, sweep These nouns denote an area within which something acts, operates, or has power or control: the range of a nuclear missile; the ambit of municipal legislation; information within the compass of the article; countries within the political orbit of a world power; regulations under the government's purview; outside the reach of the law; issues within the scope of an investigation; outside the sweep of federal authority. See also synonyms at wander.
 
 
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS · INDEX · ILLUSTRATIONS · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
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