The position of the camera on a vertical continuum relative to the object being shot: eye-level, high-angle (looking down from above), low-angle (looking up from below), Dutch-angle (with the normal vertical axis tilted diagonally). The term can include the perspective given by the camera to the depth of focus, height and width of the particular object and action being photographed.
The position of the frame in relation to the subject it shows: above it, looking down (a high angle); horizontal, on the same level (a straight-on angle); looking up (a low angle).
Various positions of the camera that are chosen to give a subject a different viewpoint, perspective or visual effect. These positions are usually high, medium, or low; and left, right, or straight on.
The position of the camera relative to the actors
The position of the camera in relation to the subject determines the camera angle. High angle means that the camera is looking down at the subject. Low angle means that the camera is looking up at the subject.
the angle from which a shot is to be taken (e.g., a close-up angle is a shot that should be made from a close proximity to the subject, either through tighter lens focusing or by the camera being placed physically closer to the action).
The viewpoint chosen to photograph a subject.
Same as " shooting angle" or "viewpoint". The position of the camera relative to the position of the subject.
The relationship of the position of the camera to that of the subject. Most common is to hold the camera horizontal to the subject, but often more impact can be achieved by altering the camera angle to change the perspective and line the subject up with an interesting background.
The camera angle marks the specific location at which a camera is placed to take a shot. A scene may be shot from several camera angles.