i thought the engines were at a angle? some of them move? seems a engine would always want to be at zero angle of attack unless thrust was used to increase angle of attack or is vectored thrust called "pushing" the tail?

To my knowledge, most engines ARE slightly off of parallel with the fuselage of the body, but only very slightly, and because the airstream doesn't necessarily run perfectly parallel. As for engines moving, I don't know of any. The inlets themselves on high performance fighters DO move, but that has more to do with transonic aerodynamics than anything else. (The ONE thing I learned from my API engines class lol).
[Explanation: In subsonic airflow, as the inlet gets larger, the air flowing into it slows down. The exhaust gas coming out of the aircraft at subsonic speeds moves faster as the outlet gets smaller. Once you cross into supersonic speeds, the opposite is true. Larger inlet = faster airflow, larger nozzle = faster exhaust. So, with high-performance jets expected to perform on both sides of that boundary, variable inlets and variable exhaust nozzles are necessary to maintain smooth flow and achieve the desired engine performance.]