Word definition: camera

Etimology


Learned borrowing from Latin camera (“chamber or bedchamber”), from Ancient Greek καμάρα (kamára, “anything with an arched cover, a covered carriage or boat, a vaulted chamber, a vault”), of Old Iranian origin, from Proto-Iranian *kamarā- (“something curved”), from *kamárati, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *kmárati, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kh₂em- (“to bend, curve”). Doublet of chamber. (device): A clipping of camera obscura, from New Latin camera obscura (“dark chamber”), because the first cameras used a pinhole and a dark room.

noun


camera (plural cameras or (rare) cameræ or (rare) camerae)

(photography) A device for taking still or moving pictures or photographs.

(computer graphics, video games) The viewpoint in a three-dimensional game or simulation.

A vaulted room.

A judge's private chamber, where cases may be heard in camera.

Examples


The single-imaging optic of the mammalian eye offers some distinct visual advantages. Such lenses can take in photons from a wide range of angles, increasing light sensitivity. They also have high spatial resolution, resolving incoming images in minute detail. It’s therefore not surprising that most cameras mimic this arrangement.

If you're building a third-person game with enclosed or tight spaces, try to figure out up front what camera problems you will likely encounter. Use this identification process to influence the early building process.

I'm talking about the way the camera flies up above the skater when you leap into the air. No one had done it before.

Related words


related terms

bicameral

camerated

Data provided by Wiktionary