False. There are no verticles in a square - or anywhere else for that matter: there is no such word.
yes because the sides are called "legs" and the longer side is called "hypotenuse"
true
It is true
8 lines and 16 right angles.
A square has diagonals that split the angles into two 45-degree parts, thus bisecting them.
A square has four equal sides and four equal interior angles of 90 degrees that add up to 360 degrees.
Draw four perpendicular lines that cross each other. Like this: # except at right angles. Count the angles - 4 in the centre square, and 12 around the overlapping parts.
All right angles are 90 degrees in size
Rhombus and square are the only quadrilaterals whose diagonals bisect the angles of the quadrilateral. In both these quadrilaterals, the diagonals intersect at right angles, dividing each angle into two equal parts.
false
3 angles
Yes. If all the question's parts are true, then the answer is true. If all the question's parts are false, then the answer is false. If one of the question's parts is false and the rest true, then the answer is false. Logically, this is illustrated below using: A = True, B = True, C = True, D = False, E = False, F = False A and B and C = True D and E and F = False A and B and D = False If you add NOT, it's a bit more complicated. A and NOT(D) = True and True = True NOT(D) and D = True and False = False NOT(A) and NOT(B) = False and False = False Using OR adds another layer of complexity. A OR NOT(E) = True OR True = True NOT(D) OR D = True OR False = False NOT(A) OR NOT(B) = False OR False = False Logic is easy once you understand the rules.