ranged

Variant of range

transitive verb ranged, ranging

  1. to arrange in a certain order; esp., to set in a row or rows
  2. to put into the proper class or classes; systematize
  3. to place with others in a cause, party, etc.: to range oneself with the rebels
  4. to put (a gun, telescope, etc.) in a line with the target or object, at a proper angle of elevation; train
  5. Now Rare to make level or even
  6. to travel over or through; roam about: to range the woods
  7. to travel or move along: to range the coastline
  8. ☆ to put out (cattle, etc.) to graze on a range
  9. to arrange (the anchor cable) in even rows on deck

Origin: ME rangen < OFr ranger, var. of rengier, to arrange in a circle, row (> ME rengen) < renc < Frank *hring, akin to OE, OHG hring, ring

intransitive verb

  1. to extend, reach, or lie in a given direction or in a row: hills ranging toward the south
  2. to wander about; roam
  3. to move about an area, as in hunting: dogs ranging through the woods
  4. to have a specified range: a gun that ranges five miles
  5. to vary between stated limits: children ranging in age from 5 to 12
  6. Biol. to be native to a specified region

noun

  1. a row, line, or series; rank
  2. a class, kind, or order
  3. a series of connected mountains considered as a single system
    1. the maximum effective horizontal distance that a weapon can fire its projectile
    2. the horizontal distance from a weapon to its target
    3. the path of flight for a missile or rocket
    4. the distance to or from any target, goal, or object of interest: to view a wild animal at close range
  4. the maximum distance a plane, etc. can travel without fueling
    1. a place for shooting practice
    2. a place for testing rockets in flight
  5. the full extent over which something moves or is heard, seen, understood, effective, etc.; scope: the range of one's studies
  6. full extent of pitch, from highest to lowest tones, of a voice, instrument, composition, etc.
  7. a wandering or roaming
  8. ☆ a large, open area of land over which livestock can wander and graze
  9. the limits of possible variations of amount, degree, etc.: a wide range of prices
  10. a unit for cooking, typically including an oven and surface heating units and usually operated by gas or electricity
  11. ☆ in U.S. public surveying, a strip of land between two meridian lines six miles apart, constituting a row of townships
  12. Biol. the region to which a plant or animal is native
  13. Math. the set of all distinct values that may be taken on by a given function
  14. Statistics the difference between the largest and smallest values in a sample

Origin: ME reng < OFr renc

adjective

of a range, or open grazing place
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2010 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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