From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtop-of-the-rangeˌtop-of-the-ˈrange British English, top-of-the-line American English adjective a product that is top-of-the-range is the best of its kind a top-of-the-range electric guitar
Examples from the Corpus
top-of-the-range• The 600 is priced from £13,995 for the 620i to £21,995 for the top-of-the-range 623GSi which I tested recently.• For £2.50, he got a petrol cap - and the choice of any top-of-the-range Ford.• As our top-of-the-range freestanding cooker, the Eclipse is furnished with all of the features you'd ever imagine.• It also claimed that buyers could save more than £5,000 on a top-of-the-range Mercedes and £1,000 on an Austin Metro.• One terrified victim was shot in the legs as he sat in his top-of-the-range Mercedes at traffic lights.• A car salesperson has many models ranging from small economy cars to super luxury top-of-the-range models.• Even at £19.99 for a top-of-the-range silk masterpiece, ties are not exactly big ticket items.From Longman Business Dictionarytop-of-the-rangeˈtop-of-the-ˌrange adjectiveMARKETING used to describe the most expensive products in a range of products or a markettop-of-the-range PCsThis is our top-of-the-range model.