No, not all four angles in a rhombus are congruent. A rhombus has opposite angles that are congruent, and the adjacent angles are supplementary, meaning they add up to 180 degrees. Therefore, while opposite angles are equal, the four angles are not necessarily all the same. In fact, a rhombus can have two acute angles and two obtuse angles.
In all parallelograms, opposite angles and opposite sides are congruent. If all four sides are congruent, it's a rhombus. If all four angles are congruent, it's a rectangle. If all four sides and all four angles are congruent, it's a square.
- A rhombus had four sides and four angles - All four sides of a rhombus are congruent - Both pairs of opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent - One angle of a rhombus is supplementary to both of its consecutive angles - The diagonals of a rhombus bisect each other and are perpendicular - Both pairs of opposite sides of a rhombus are parallel
rhombus
The quadrilateral described is a rhombus. A rhombus has all four sides of equal length and opposite angles that are congruent, with adjacent angles being supplementary. This means it can have two distinct pairs of congruent angles, satisfying the condition mentioned. Additionally, a rhombus can be considered a special type of parallelogram.
Yes, it is possible to draw a square and a rhombus that are congruent. A square is a specific type of rhombus where all angles are right angles, and all sides are equal in length. If a rhombus has all sides equal to the side length of a square and its angles are also right angles, then they are congruent. Hence, a square can be considered a congruent rhombus under these conditions.
In all parallelograms, opposite angles and opposite sides are congruent. If all four sides are congruent, it's a rhombus. If all four angles are congruent, it's a rectangle. If all four sides and all four angles are congruent, it's a square.
A rhombus is a parallelogram with all four sides congruent to each other with no right angles. A square is a parallelogram with four congruent sides and four right angles.
No, definition of rhombus is having four congruent sides, but that means its angles don't have to be all congruent. A square is having four congruent sides and angles.
- A rhombus had four sides and four angles - All four sides of a rhombus are congruent - Both pairs of opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent - One angle of a rhombus is supplementary to both of its consecutive angles - The diagonals of a rhombus bisect each other and are perpendicular - Both pairs of opposite sides of a rhombus are parallel
All rhombuses have two pairs of congruent angles (opposite angles are congruent to one another - a square is a special case type of rhombus in which all four angles are congruent).
Yes, all four sides of a rhombus are congruent. The angles are just different compared to that of a square, they are not 90 degrees in each vertex.
a rectangle or square.
A Rhombus is:A quadrilateralAll sides equalOpposite sides parallelA Rhombus is a quadrilateral, therefore its interior angles sum to 360°If all the interior angles are congruent they are all 360° ÷ 4 = 90°Thus a Rhombus will 4 congruent angles is:A quadrilateralAll sides equalOpposite sides parallelAll angles equal (to 90°)This is the the definition of a Square. A Square is a "special" Rhombus with all angles equal.
A four-sided polygon with all sides parallel and congruent is a rhombus. If all the angles are equal, it is a special case of a rhombus called a square.
No
rhombus
A rhombus with 4 congruent angles is a rectangular rhombus having interior angles that are all right angles (90°) and therefore it is a square.