yes
If all of the sides of the kite have the same length, and it happens to be the sameas the length of each side of the rhombus, andeach angle of the kite happens to bethe same size as one of the angles of the rhombus, thenthey can be congruent.
A kite is different from a rhombus in a few ways: * Kites have two pairs of adjacent legs that are congruent, and each pair is a separate length; a rhombus has four congruent sides. * A kite and rhombus both have perpendicular diagonals, but in a kite, only the diagonal between the pairs of sides (the diagonal between two sides of different length) is bisected; the other is not. Also, the diagonals bisect all of the angles of a rhombus; only the angles in the middle of the pairs of sides (angles with two legs of equal length) are bisected. * Only the angles between the pairs of sides are congruent in a kite; a rhombus has 2 pairs of congruent opposite angles. You can also think of a rhombus as a combination between a kite and a parallelogram, the same way you can think of a square as a combination of a rectangle and a rhombus. Hope this helps!
It could be a square, rhombus, trapezium, kite or arrowhead.
Yes, a kite typically has at least one obtuse angle. A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of consecutive, congruent sides. In a kite, the angles between the non-congruent sides (the angles opposite the longer and shorter sides) are usually not congruent. One of these angles can be obtuse, depending on the specific shape of the kite. However, it's important to note that a kite can also have acute angles, but it must have at least one obtuse angle.
Either a square, rectangle, or parallelogram fit this description.
No, not every rhombus will be a kite. The opposite is also true that not every kite will be a rhombus.
Rhombus' Congruent AnglesIt's not the adjacent angles of a rhombus that are congruent, but the diagonal ones.
A quadrilateral in which adjacent angles are congruent is called a kite. In a kite, the adjacent angles formed by the intersecting diagonals are congruent. This property distinguishes a kite from other types of quadrilaterals, such as a parallelogram or a rhombus, where adjacent angles are not necessarily congruent. Kites have specific properties and characteristics that make them a unique type of quadrilateral in geometry.
With an adequate tail, a rhombus could be a kite.
A rhombus and kite are different quadrilaterals. All four sides of a rhombus are of equal length: this is not necessary for a kite.
It can be a kite.
two pairs of congruent angles in a rhombus