Range in a sentence as a noun

The apps themselves are in the $0-$10 range.

There's a certain skill range where you find this behavior.

It's overnight in cold temperatures and the car was at less than 50% of its range.

And how much a wider range of experiences can make their work part better as well.

" I had done a lot to develop my talents and knowledge base, and in a range of areas to boot.

"What the ****, I can't get back to Milford on this expected range, can you find me a nearby charger?

So it comes as no surprise that we first have conclusive results about the higher mass range.

Most importantly, most apps run in the 5-50MB range, so downloads are quick and my apps are ready to go in minutes.

The Nissan Leaf has a terrible time of it, with the range decreased significantly.

And that includes becoming cultivated in a range of areas.

He wakes up and the Tesla has lost 5 miles of range inexplicably -- but it therefore has become 45 miles, which looks totally different.

Range in a sentence as a verb

On a digital display at a hotel at night, he misreads the 5 as a 9, and this fits with his expectation, so he goes to bed thinking he has 90 miles of range.

We have good days and bad days, but they fall within a certain manageable range because our body musters compensation for our emotions.

There are a range of opinions so I don't want to overgeneralize but there are a large number of people here that seem to almost despise Stallman and the FSF.

"That's a perfect storm scenario right there, because now he thinks that he does have the extra range and that braking is good for the car and that the car is simply misreporting what it can do. Confirming this, he makes it to the Milford supercharge with less than 0 miles of range, and charges it back up again to 185 miles.

" That premise underlies a whole range of securities law "exemptions" that permit small offerings, etc. so that companies can grow and develop without choking on process.

Overclocking is more complicated with its larger frequency range and dynamic configuration, so the PCH’s embedded controller and SW service are used to abstract the ICC implementation.

The problem continues recursively until your monitoring is doing comprehensive semantics checking of your entire range of services and data, at which point it's indistinguishable from automated QA.

Especially if Tesla warns it will shorten the battery's life.- It'd be better if Tesla's software took temperature into account when estimating mileage range.- Broder is being ridiculous about the cruise control and his speed estimates, and the temperature.

The only reasonably accurate paragraph is this: "And, more importantly, the lower energy range from 114 to just under 145 billion electron volts, a region of energy that Fermilab has determined, through earlier experiments, may harbor the Higgs, has not been ruled out.

He's just being obstinate here.- It's laughable to say that the Tesla fell short of its projected range when the projected range was from the day before, before not plugging it in on a cold night.- Tesla and Broder directly contradict each other on whether they gave him the go-ahead to stop charging after an hour in Norwich.

Range definitions

noun

an area in which something acts or operates or has power or control: "the range of a supersonic jet"; "a piano has a greater range than the human voice"; "the ambit of municipal legislation"; "within the compass of this article"; "within the scope of an investigation"; "outside the reach of the law"; "in the political orbit of a world power"

See also: scope reach orbit compass ambit

noun

the limits within which something can be effective; "range of motion"; "he was beyond the reach of their fire"

See also: reach

noun

a large tract of grassy open land on which livestock can graze; "they used to drive the cattle across the open range every spring"; "he dreamed of a home on the range"

noun

a series of hills or mountains; "the valley was between two ranges of hills"; "the plains lay just beyond the mountain range"

See also: chain

noun

a place for shooting (firing or driving) projectiles of various kinds; "the army maintains a missile range in the desert"; "any good golf club will have a range where you can practice"

noun

a variety of different things or activities; "he answered a range of questions"; "he was impressed by the range and diversity of the collection"

noun

(mathematics) the set of values of the dependent variable for which a function is defined; "the image of f(x) = x^2 is the set of all non-negative real numbers if the domain of the function is the set of all real numbers"

See also: image

noun

the limit of capability; "within the compass of education"

See also: compass reach grasp

noun

a kitchen appliance used for cooking food; "dinner was already on the stove"

See also: stove

verb

change or be different within limits; "Estimates for the losses in the earthquake range as high as $2 billion"; "Interest rates run from 5 to 10 percent"; "The instruments ranged from tuba to cymbals"; "My students range from very bright to dull"

verb

move about aimlessly or without any destination, often in search of food or employment; "The gypsies roamed the woods"; "roving vagabonds"; "the wandering Jew"; "The cattle roam across the prairie"; "the laborers drift from one town to the next"; "They rolled from town to town"

verb

have a range; be capable of projecting over a certain distance, as of a gun; "This gun ranges over two miles"

verb

range or extend over; occupy a certain area; "The plants straddle the entire state"

See also: straddle

verb

lay out orderly or logically in a line or as if in a line; "lay out the clothes"; "lay out the arguments"

See also: array

verb

feed as in a meadow or pasture; "the herd was grazing"

See also: crop browse graze pasture

verb

let eat; "range the animals in the prairie"

verb

assign a rank or rating to; "how would you rank these students?"; "The restaurant is rated highly in the food guide"

See also: rate rank order grade place