high-angle fire | fire from a cannon that is fired at an elevation greater than that for the maximum range |
angle bracket angle iron | an L-shaped metal bracket |
high-angle gun | a cannon that can be fired at a high elevation for relatively short ranges |
wide-angle lens fisheye lens | a camera lens having a wider than normal angle of view (and usually a short focal length), produces an image that is foreshortened in the center and increasingly distorted in the periphery |
camera angle | the point of view of a camera |
slant angle | a biased way of looking at or presenting something |
bracket angle bracket | either of two punctuation marks (`<' or `>') used in computer programming and sometimes used to enclose textual material |
hour angle | the angular distance along the celestial equator from the observer's meridian to the hour circle of a given celestial body |
Angle | a member of a Germanic people who conquered England and merged with the Saxons and Jutes to become Anglo-Saxons |
straight angle | an angle ofdegrees |
helix angle | the constant angle at which a helix cuts the elements of a cylinder or cone |
angle | the space between two lines or planes that intersect, the inclination of one line to another, measured in degrees or radians |
hour angle HA | (astronomy) the angular distance of a celestial point measured westward along the celestial equator from the zenith crossing, the right ascension for an observer at a particular location and time of day |
plane angle | an angle formed by two straight lines (in the same plane) |
spherical angle | an angle formed at the intersection of the arcs of two great circles |
solid angle | an angle formed by three or more planes intersecting at a common point (the vertex) |
inclination angle of inclination | (geometry) the angle formed by the x-axis and a given line (measured counterclockwise from the positive half of the x-axis) |
reentrant angle reentering angle | an interior angle of a polygon that is greater thandegrees |
salient angle | an angle pointing outward, an interior angle of a polygon that is less thandegrees |
interior angle internal angle | the angle inside two adjacent sides of a polygon |
exterior angle external angle | the supplement of an interior angle of a polygon |
angle of incidence incidence angle | the angle that a line makes with a line perpendicular to the surface at the point of incidence |
angle of attack | the acute angle between the direction of the undisturbed relative wind and the chord of an airfoil |
critical angle | the smallest angle of incidence for which light is totally reflected |
angle of reflection | the angle between a reflected ray and a line perpendicular to the reflecting surface at the point of incidence |
angle of refraction | the angle between a refracted ray and a line perpendicular to the surface between the two media at the point of refraction |
angle of extinction extinction angle | the angle from its axis that a crystal must be rotated before appearing maximally dark when viewed in polarized light |
acute angle | an angle less thandegrees but more than degrees |
obtuse angle | an angle betweenanddegrees |
right angle | thedegree angle between two perpendicular lines |
oblique angle | an angle that is not a right angle or a multiple of a right angle |
reflex angle | an angle greater thandegrees (but less than ) |
perigon round angle | an angle ofdegrees |
cutting angle | the angle between the face of a cutting tool and the surface of the work |
dip angle of dip magnetic dip magnetic inclination inclination | (physics) the angle that a magnetic needle makes with the plane of the horizon |
polyhedral angle | the space enclosed by three or more planes that intersect in a vertex |
face angle | the angle formed by two edges of a polyhedral angle |
tilt angle | the angle a rocket makes with the vertical as it curves along its trajectory |
vertical angle | either of two equal and opposite angles formed by the intersection of two straight lines |
view angle angle of view | the angle included by a photographic lens |
wave angle | the angle of arrival (or departure) of a radio wave with respect to the axis of an antenna array |
acute glaucoma closed-angle glaucoma anglelosure glaucoma | glaucoma in which the iris blocks the outflow of aqueous humor, closed-angle glaucoma can cause a rapid buildup of high intraocular pressure that results in permanent visual damage in a couple of days |
chronic glaucoma open-angle glaucoma | glaucoma caused by blockage of the canal of Schlemm, produces gradual loss of peripheral vision, open-angle glaucoma is the most common type of glaucoma |
phase phase angle | a particular point in the time of a cycle, measured from some arbitrary zero and expressed as an angle |
slant angle weight | present with a bias, He biased his presentation so as to please the share holders |
angle | fish with a hook |
fish angle | seek indirectly, fish for compliments |
angle-park | park at an angle |
lean tilt tip slant angle | to incline or bend from a vertical position, She leaned over the banister |
angle | move or proceed at an angle, he angled his way into the room |