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"camera shot" is a perfectly fine phrase to use in written English.
You would use it when talking about a technique of filmmaking, where a particular "shot" is composed by a camera, rather than just being narrated or described. For example, "The director's decision to use a wide-angle camera shot emphasized the vastness of the desert setting."
Exact(56)
A slight pause allows time for the camera shot to shift from the host to you.
Destruction and restoration, in one sweeping camera shot.
He was reading from two teleprompters, strategically set up outside the tight television camera shot.
For every breathless plot twist there's a camera shot or angle to appreciate.
One tight camera shot follows the blue shirted figure as he runs up.
When he swivels away, another camera shot reveals it to be a player piano.
Overheated, he stripped naked and finally burst out and rolled onto the floor grunting in a sustained camera shot.
And the officer complies, ducking down and sliding to the left so the newsman had a clear camera shot.
"This is Steve," the announcer says as the camera shot widens to show Steve dancing on a tax preparer's desk.
Similar(2)
At one point, Gosling asked Cassavetes to "bring somebody else in for my off-camera shot" because he felt McAdams was uncooperative.
At one point, Gosling asked Cassavetes to "bring somebody else in for my off-camera shot" because he felt McAdams was being uncooperative.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com