range of variation
1variation — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, dramatic, enormous, extreme, great, major, marked, significant, substantial, tremendous, wide …
2variation — (statistical) The greater part of empirical research is concerned with the characteristics of groups, or aggregate social entities, rather than individual cases; that is, with men or women in general, rather than any particular man or woman. A… …
3variation (statistical) — The greater part of empirical research is concerned with the characteristics of groups, or aggregate social entities, rather than individual cases; that is, with men or women in general, rather than any particular man or woman. A range of… …
4range — n 1 *habitat, biotype, station 2 Range, gamut, reach, radius, compass, sweep, scope, orbit, horizon, ken, purview can denote the extent that lies within the powers of something to cover, grasp, control, or traverse. Range is the general term… …
5range — ► NOUN 1) the area of variation between limits on a particular scale: the car s outside my price range. 2) a set of different things of the same general type. 3) the scope or extent of a person s or thing s abilities or capacity. 4) the distance… …
6range — /raynj/, n., adj., v., ranged, ranging. n. 1. the extent to which or the limits between which variation is possible: the range of steel prices; a wide range of styles. 2. the extent or scope of the operation or action of something: within range… …
7Variation ratio — The variation ratio is a simple measure of statistical dispersion in nominal distributions; it is the simplest measure of qualitative variation.It is defined as the percent of cases which are not the mode::mathbf{v} := 1 frac{f m}{N}.While a… …
8variation — by Jonathan Roffe Deleuze mobilises the concept of variation in order to insist on what is perhaps his most fundamental theme, that existence is not characterised primarily by unities, but rather by a continual sense of movement and change.… …
9variation — by Jonathan Roffe Deleuze mobilises the concept of variation in order to insist on what is perhaps his most fundamental theme, that existence is not characterised primarily by unities, but rather by a continual sense of movement and change.… …
10range — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 different things within the same category ADJECTIVE ▪ broad, enormous, extensive, great, huge, large, vast, wide ▪ …