(of a gun or similar weapon) have a greater range than.
Example sentencesExamples
By the outbreak of World War I, moreover, battleship ordnance could once more outrange most of the guns of the shore defenses, with the plunging trajectory of naval shells making open-topped defensive works untenable.
Nobody really knows who first mooted the idea of making a gun in Kimberley which could outrange the Boer artillery.
Besides, by then the bombers so far outranged the jets that desperate expedients such as towing the jets or carrying them in B - 36 bomb bays proved fruitless.
Definition of outrange in US English:
outrange
verbˌaʊtˈreɪndʒˌoutˈrānj
(of a gun or its user) have a longer range than.
Example sentencesExamples
By the outbreak of World War I, moreover, battleship ordnance could once more outrange most of the guns of the shore defenses, with the plunging trajectory of naval shells making open-topped defensive works untenable.
Besides, by then the bombers so far outranged the jets that desperate expedients such as towing the jets or carrying them in B - 36 bomb bays proved fruitless.
Nobody really knows who first mooted the idea of making a gun in Kimberley which could outrange the Boer artillery.