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Share If each quadrilateral below is a rhombus, find the missing measures UV: 8 and WX=5?
this is a quadrilateral. for further examples, see below square rectangle trapezoid rhombus parrallelogram
The answer is given below.
It would be a concave quadrilateral The link below has some pics.
none
The answer is below!
Which of the following is a valid reason why the quadrilateral shown below is a parallelogram?
To find the measure of the missing angle in a quadrilateral, you can use the fact that the sum of the interior angles in any quadrilateral is 360 degrees. If you know the measures of the other three angles, simply add them together and subtract that sum from 360 degrees. The result will give you the measure of the missing angle. If you provide the specific angles, I can help you calculate it directly!
Area of a rhombus: base times perpendicular height Or area of a rhombus: 0.5 times product of its diagonals
To classify a quadrilateral, we need to examine its properties such as the lengths of its sides, the measures of its angles, and whether it has parallel sides. For instance, if it has two pairs of parallel sides, it is a parallelogram; if all sides are equal and all angles are right angles, it is a square. Additionally, if only one pair of opposite sides are parallel, it can be classified as a trapezoid. Without specific details about the quadrilateral, a precise classification cannot be determined.
a and d
If the diagonals of the rhombus are 13 and 15 then its area is 0.5*13*15 = 97.5 square units