Not only can it but it must. And both of them.
The longer diagonal bisects the shorter diagonal.
Kites, arrowheads.
Yes: one of them, but the other diagonal does not.
No, they do not. Only the longer diagonal bisects the shorter diagonal.
isn't it a rhombus ? the ones that are like a slanted square ? because there are no right angles but each diagonal bisects the corners.
no
A diagonal joining opposite angles is the principal diagonal. It may or may not bisect the angles, and that does not affect its name.
What id actually says is... What fits in the blank? Diagonal AC of Parallelogram ABCD _____ bisects angle A and angle C.
No. It could be a kite.
The diagonals are perpendicular to one another. The shorter diagonal is bisected by the longer diagonal. The kite is symmetrical about the longer diagonal. The longer diagonal bisects the angles at each end of the diagonal.
Yes, in the figure of a kite one diagonal bisects the other. They do not bisect each other.
A square has an infinite number of bisectors. Specifically, it has four main bisectors: two diagonal bisectors and two that bisect the sides of the square. Each diagonal divides the square into two equal triangles, while the side bisectors split the square into two equal rectangles. Additionally, any line that passes through the center of the square can also be considered a bisector.