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range
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia 0.01 sec.

range

In physical geography, a line of mountains (such as the Alps or Himalayas). In human geography, the distance that people are prepared to travel (often to a central place) to obtain various goods or services. In mathematics, the range of a set of numbers is the difference between the largest and the smallest number; for example, 5, 8, 2, 9, 4 = 9 − 2 = 7; this sense is used in terms like ‘tidal range’ and ‘temperature range’. Range is also a name for an open piece of land where cattle are ranched.

range

In statistics, a measure of dispersion in a frequency distribution, equalling the difference between the largest and smallest values of the variable. The range is sensitive to extreme values in the sense that it will give a distorted picture of the dispersion if one measurement is unusually large or small. The interquartile range is often preferred.



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Mentioned in?  References in periodicals archive?   Hutchinson browser?   Full browser?
 
Federal Reserve will maintain its low-interest-rate policy, though it moved in a narrow range against the yen due to a lack of fresh trading incentives, dealers said.
Summary: The British pound continued to hold a broad range against the euro, with the pair failing to cross above 0.
Setchell showed impressive speed of fist and foot to dart in and out of range against a much taller opponent and the stylish southpaw forced a count in the second with a two-fisted burst.
 
 
 
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