This is true in squares and rectangles.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
This is false for all rhomboids (a distinct parallelogram such that 4 sides are equal, and has non-right angles), since by congruency, a parallelogram can be flipped on its axis (with 2 closer vertices), producing 2 unequal length diagonals.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in a rectangle.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
Diagonals never bisect sides. They join the ends of sides.In a rectangle, the diagonals always bisect each other.
Yes
The diagonals of a rectangular shape will only bisect opposite angles if, in fact, the shape is a square. Otherwise they will not bisect them.
rhombus
Most figures.
Yes normally
The diagonals of a square are always perpendicular.
Yes, by connecting the opposite vertices we can make triangles.