A rhombus does not have right angles. A square always has right angles.
Never
Yes a square always has 4 right angles but a rhombus never has any right angles.
A rhombus normally has no right angles (at the vertices). If a rhombus has right angles (at the vertices), it is called a square. The diagonals of a rhombus meet at right angles.
A square with 4 right angles and has a point of a triangle on the end of the square
No, it is the other way around: a square is a rhombus with right angles.
ALWAYSevery square is a rhombus, but every rhombus is not a square.A square must have right angles and a rhombus does not have to have those.A rhombus is a quadrilateral with equal length sides, and can have oblique angles or right angles. A square only has right angles. A rhombus with right angles is a square. Other rhombi are not squares.By these definitions, all squares are rhombi, but not all rhombi are squares
no!because a rhombus does not have four right angles but a square can be rhombus.
No, by definition a rhombus has all angles equal, but they are not right angles. A square is a type of rhombus with four right angles.
No. A rhombus, in general, has a pair of acute angles opposite one another, and a pair of obtuse angles. It is only as a special case that all four angles are right angles and so the rhombus becomes a square.So every rhombus is NOT a square but every square is a special type of rhombus.
A square is technically a rhombus - but a rhombus is never a square. The definition of a rhombus is that it has two pairsof parallel sides. A square is defined as having all foursides equal,
It is a square.