The diagonals of an isosceles trapezoid are equal in lengths
A diagonal always forms an angle bisector in a square. In a rectangle, trapezoid, or any other quadrilateral, a diagonal does not always bisect the angles.
Trapezoid
Yes It always does because of how a trapezoid is shaped.
Yes: The intersection is at one end of each side. This is true for a diagonal of any quadrilateral.
No, it is not.
A trapezoid.
There are lot of shapes in geometry. It is called polygons. Triangle, trapezoid, circle, parallelogram, rhombus, rectangle, diagonal, square etc. Parallelogram, rhombus, rectangle, diagonal, square, and trapezoid are quadrilaterals.
A line which intersects another line at an angle between 0 and 180 degrees.
No, in general, it does not.
The answer is: usually not.
When you draw a diagonal in a rectangle or a parallelogram, it divides the shape into two congruent triangles, meaning both triangles are the same size and shape. In contrast, drawing a diagonal in a trapezoid results in two triangles that can differ in size and shape, as the bases of the trapezoid are unequal. Thus, different size and shape triangles form only in the trapezoid.