l]
noun, verb, -gled, -gling.| 1. | Geometry.
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| 2. | an angular projection; a projecting corner: the angles of a building. |
| 3. | a viewpoint; standpoint: He looked at the problem only from his own angle. |
| 4. | Journalism.
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| 5. | one aspect of an event, problem, subject, etc.: The accountant emphasized the tax angle of the leasing arrangement. |
| 6. | Movies, Photography. angle shot. |
| 7. | Informal. a secret motive: She's been too friendly lately—what's her angle? |
| 8. | Astrology. any of the four interceptions of the equatorial circle by the two basic axes, the horizon and the meridian: commonly identified by the compass directions. |
| 9. | angle iron (def. 2). |
| 10. | to move or bend in an angle. |
| 11. | to set, fix, direct, or adjust at an angle: to angle a spotlight. |
| 12. | Journalism. to write or edit in such a way as to appeal to a particular audience; slant: She angled her column toward teenagers. |
| 13. | to turn sharply in a different direction: The road angles to the right. |
| 14. | to move or go in angles or at an angle: The trout angled downstream. |
| 15. | Slang. play the angles, to use every available means to reach one's goal: A second-rate talent can survive only by playing all the angles. |

l]
verb, -gled, -gling, noun | 1. | to fish with hook and line. |
| 2. | to attempt to get something by sly or artful means; fish: to angle for a compliment. |
| 3. | Archaic. a fishhook or fishing tackle. |

an·gle 2 (āng'gəl) n.
v. tr.
To continue along or turn at an angle or by angles: The road angles sharply to the left. The path angled through the woods. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin angulus.] |
angle
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"It is but a sory lyfe and an yuell to stand anglynge all day to catche a fewe fisshes." [John Palsgrave, 1530]
angle an·gle (āng'gəl)
n.
The figure or space formed by the junction of two lines or planes.