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In Merriam-Webster dictionary, none of the meaning of 'slab' is 'range'. But slab is also used to mean range in India. For example, limit X1 for weight slab 10-20kg, limit X2 for slab 20-30 kg.

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  • I've never heard slab used to convey range. Also, I would interpret "limit X1 for weight slab 10-20 kg* as meaning X1 is the limit for slabs weighing 10-20 kg." Do you have another example not involving weight? Commented Jul 3, 2020 at 16:12
  • Freight charges X1 for transporting a box in a weight slab 100-200kg, X2 for transporting a box in a weight slab 200-300kg. Thank you Commented Jul 7, 2020 at 3:03

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I'm a native English speaker and not heard it used like this as far as I can remember but if I did hear someone use it like this I wouldn't find fault with it. I did some research on this and found it used in text describing "price slabs" which means "pricing ranges" e.g., $0-500: https://support.reportgarden.com/en/articles/2002057-about-slab-based-pricing#:~:text=Slabs%20are%20adspend%20(usage)%20ranges,the%20slab%20for%20each%20range.

I think "slab" is just a generic describer of a "large-piece" of anything. It sounds a bit slangy maybe? But I think should be fine to use it in any context.

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  • Thank you, @user2980368 Commented Jul 7, 2020 at 3:08
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I've seen "slab" used this way occasionally, kind of in the same metaphoric sense that "slice" might be used. It's not particularly idiomatic, though.

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