Yes, a kite has two pairs of equal sides. Specifically, each pair consists of two adjacent sides that are of equal length. This property distinguishes a kite from other quadrilaterals. Additionally, the diagonals of a kite intersect at right angles, further defining its unique shape.
It depends on what kind of kite. It could be equal
A Kite. The two sets of equal sides are consecutive.
Yes. Two adjacent sides are equal; the other two sides are also equal between themselves.
A rhombus has four sides that are all the same length ---------------------------------------- but if you are talking about the geometric shape kite - it is not a rhombus. A kite has two adjacent sides of equal length and the other two sides of equal length. Only a square can be a rhombus.
No, a kite does not have two pairs of opposite sides that are parallel. In a kite, one pair of adjacent sides is equal in length, while the other pair is also equal, but the opposite sides are not parallel. This distinguishes kites from parallelograms, which do have two pairs of parallel sides.
It depends on what kind of kite. It could be equal
A kite has two pairs of equal-length sides. If that is the question, then kite will satisfy it.
A kite has two pairs of equal sides with no parallel sides.
A Kite. The two sets of equal sides are consecutive.
It has two pairs of equal sides.
Yes. Two adjacent sides are equal; the other two sides are also equal between themselves.
Not usually. In Geometry a kite is defined as a quadrilateral figure having two pairs of equal adjacent sides.
kite figure
A rhombus has four sides that are all the same length ---------------------------------------- but if you are talking about the geometric shape kite - it is not a rhombus. A kite has two adjacent sides of equal length and the other two sides of equal length. Only a square can be a rhombus.
A kite has 2 pairs of equal sides.
A kite is a quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent congruent sides. The angles between the unequal sides are equal.
A kite.