From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishshort-rangeˌshort-ˈrange adjective 1 NEAR[only before noun] short-range weapons or missiles are designed to travel or be used over a short distance OPP long-range short-range nuclear weapons2 → short-range plan/goal/forecast etc
Examples from the Corpus
short-range• Yukawa realised that the short-range attractive force between nuclear particles could be explained as the exchange of a massive intermediate particle.• Cellular telephone is another alternative, but only for short-range calls.• If so you will find it helpful to set some goals to give short-range guidance.• Impacts on land are severe short-range hazards, but impacts in the ocean are dangerous even at very long ranges.• The feature is used in the A320 short-range jet and in the A330 and A340 longer-range planes.• Short-range missiles in Asia do not pose a direct threat to the U.S.• It committed the forthcoming summit to draw up a mandate for negotiations on short-range nuclear forces.• a short-range nuclear missile• The manager has a short-range view; the leader has a long-range perspective.• This is particularly true for a defensive system based on comparatively small, independent units, armed with short-range weapons.