range

  • 51Range — 1. Übername zu mhd., mnd. range »böser, wilder Junge«, fnhd. range »Schurke«. 2. Vereinzelt niederdeutscher Übername zu mnd. range »wilde Sau« …

    Wörterbuch der deutschen familiennamen

  • 52range — limiting range of range transformation range …

    Mechanics glossary

  • 53rangė — rañgė sf. (2) 1. MLTEI521 iš kaspinų surangytas moterų galvos papuošalas: XIX a. pabaigoje merginų ir moterų galvos danga suvienodėjo: galionus ir iš kaspinų sulankstytas ranges pakeitė skarelės rš. Pasipuošk galvą range Šlv. 2. ms.: Šarangė… …

    Dictionary of the Lithuanian Language

  • 54Range — *1. Dass dich der Rangen anstosse! – Frommann, VI, 7 u. 9. D.i. Sanct Urban s (s.d.) Plage oder Feuer. A. Stöber a.a.O. bemerkt dazu: »Diese Redensart ist speciell elsässisch, und ich habe sie bisher nur in der Kleinen thanner Chronik gefunden.… …

    Deutsches Sprichwörter-Lexikon

  • 55range — 1. noun /ɹeɪndʒ/ a) Line or series of mountains Therein an hundred raunges weren pight, / And hundred fornaces all burning bright; b) A fireplace; a fire or other cooking apparatus; now specifically, a large cooking stove with many hotplates We… …

    Wiktionary

  • 56range — ran·ge s.m.inv. ES ingl. {{wmetafile0}} 1. TS scient. → intervallo | estens., intervallo di variazione; scarto, oscillazione 2. TS tecn. raggio d azione, portata di un sistema di radiocomunicazioni, di un radiotrasmettitore o sim. 3. TS fis.… …

    Dizionario italiano

  • 57range — [13] Range and rank come ultimately from the same source: Old French ranc. This was borrowed directly into English as rank, but it subsequently developed to rang, from which was derived the verb rangier ‘set in a row’ (ancestor of English… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 58range — šaudykla statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Vieta, įrengta šaudymo į taikinius pratyboms ar ginklams bandyti. atitikmenys: angl. range; target range pranc. champ de tir; polygone; stand de tir …

    NATO terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • 59range — [13] Range and rank come ultimately from the same source: Old French ranc. This was borrowed directly into English as rank, but it subsequently developed to rang, from which was derived the verb rangier ‘set in a row’ (ancestor of English… …

    Word origins

  • 60range — A single calibration blip fed onto the time base of a radial display. The rotation of the time base shows the single blips as a circle on the plan position indicator scope. It may be used to measure range …

    Military dictionary