No. In general it does not. Only if the rectangle is, in fact, a square.
The diagonals of a rectangle bisect the angles only if the rectangle is a square.
No, but in a square they do bisect the angles
Both are quadrilaterals. Both have two pairs of side of equal length. In a kite they are adjacent sides, in a rectangle they are opposite. A kite has one pair of equal angles, all of a rectangle's angles are equal. In a kite, one diagonals bisects the other, in a rectangle both do.
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.
Yes and at right angles
No, a rectangle's diagonals do not bisect opposite angles.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in a rectangle.
A diagonal joining opposite angles is the principal diagonal. It may or may not bisect the angles, and that does not affect its name.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
Yes.