Yes! Manual focussing is easy and that is a great lens.
There should be a setting in the back or a switch on the outside of the lenes
a focus . But really: A tsunami.
A remote isn't what you're looking for. If the camera has an mic-in input, plug a microphone away from the camera there. If not, use an external recorder for audio and sync it in your editor later. One last thing is to get a lens with internal autofocus (STM on Canon). They're much quieter.
what was sparta's focus as a city -state
The part of the subject or background on a vertical plane that is in focus
ED has nothing to do with the camera mount; it is a lens (glass) quality so yes, it will fit
Depending on what type of lens they are. They probably are AF lenses, so it'll work, but without the autofocus function. That means you'll have to make the focus manually.
Auto Focus Silent wave motor. Most AF-s lenses let you manually override the auto focus by turning the focus ring without having to flick switches on the lens.
If you have a Nikon d3200, you can get it back to auto focus by going to the setting and then resetting it to auto focus.
It works but no auto focus just manual focus.
It really depends on the camera, like on a Nikon it stands for Short Back Focus
If you have an AF, or auto-focus lens (like the kit 18-55mm lens) you can focus your lens prior to filming, but cannot auto-focus while filming. To manually focus, switch the switch on the side of your lens to 'M' for manual. To focus, turn the outer focus ring on the lens until your subject matter is clear.
It will mount fine, and the matrix metering will work. However, you'll only be able to manually focus. The D5000 does not have a focusing motor in the body, and the tokina lens has no internal motor of its own. If you don't mind manually focusing, it's not a problem, but not having AF might suck for sports, concerts, and things that move.
There should be a setting in the back or a switch on the outside of the lenes
Yes. And that is an AMAZING lens, by the way.
Yes but only with manual focus.
No