In geometry, an angle subtended (from Latin for "stretched under") by a line segment at an arbitrary vertex is formed by the two rays between the vertex and each endpoint of the segment. For example, a side of a triangle subtends the opposite angle.
More generally, an angle subtended by an arc of a curve is the angle subtended by the corresponding chord of the arc.For example, a circular arc subtends the central angle formed by the two radii through the arc endpoints.