Spectrum in a sentence as a noun

There is a whole spectrum of jobs from good to ****.

So, what really will work for us, on this spectrum from "anarchy" to "jail"?

There's a leisure class at both ends of the economic spectrum.

The most important reason why this is a no-brainer is because of the 700Mhz spectrum auction.

Though I never met him, I am convinced Steve Jobs is pretty high on the psychopathy spectrum.

One of my biggest WTF moments as a programmer was dealing with a high performance spectrum analyzer.

Their counter-parts, born into well-off families, on the other hand, have a great shot at ending up at the upper end of the income spectrum.

Deregulate the industry, use auctions to allocate spectrum, etc.

Nobody I know in my generation, regardless of where they stand on the political spectrum, gives a **** about copyright.

There's a much more interesting spectrum of human behavior online that doesn't fit into these convenient categories.

Is it really a spectrum, or is it a slippery ***** leading inevitably to one extreme or the other?Steve Jobs made some important decisions and executed them superbly.

Specialists are valuable of course, but most of the time managers end up with a broad spectrum of problems and if they can throw problems to you without wondering if you can handle it, and feel confident it's going to get done, they probably don't care that you're only 70% as efficient as the specialist.

He's just been stating the obvious all this time!- NSA surveillance!- Hadn't anyone heard about Echelon?- He stands for freedom of users!- But users don't care about those freedoms, they just want something that works!- He's antisocial and extremely rude!- Autism spectrum.- But he's not diplomatic at all, we don't want him as a spokesperson for Open Source!- It's GNU/Linux, not Linux.- See?

Spectrum definitions

noun

an ordered array of the components of an emission or wave

noun

a broad range of related objects or values or qualities or ideas or activities