present with a bias; "He biased his presentation so as to please the share holders"
The "angle" or manner in which you present the information in an article; similar to the fictional POV. For example, you might use the same data on the growing elderly population to write one article about senior health issues, another about demographic trends among the elderly, and a third about the growing political clout of seniors. Each article would represent a different slant.
to present information in a way that is in accordance with a bias
Running, with the ball, at an angle.
The bias or angle with which the author presents the information in an article. Three different authors writing about the same set of data (for example, child nutrition statistics) could have three different slants.
Refers to the angle of a font's characters, which can be Italic or Roman (no slant).
The defined approach taken in an article by the writer. Also called an angle, this is one facet of the larger topic on which the writer has chosen to focus.
An offensive running play whereby a running back veers, or slants, toward an angle after receiving the ball, as opposed to running straight ahead.
A Slant route is a pattern run by a receiver in American Football, where the receiver runs up the field at approximately a 45 degree angle, heading to the gap between the linebackers and the linemen. Usually, the pass is used when the corner or nickel back are playing further away from the receiver, so a quick pass is able to be completed before the defender has time to try to break up the pass. The pass is also used frequently in the West Coast system, where quick, accurate throwing is key.