Any ellipse is an oval shape. But all ovals are not all ellipses, some are nothing in particular.
true
They are notnecessarily the same. A circle is a subcategory of an ellipse, meaning that every single circle is guaranteed to be an ellipse, but not all ellipses will be a circle. Just like a square will be a rectangle, but not all rectangles will be squares. A circle requires that the radius remains constant throughout the entire circle, whereas an ellipse does not require this. It just has an extra requirement that disqualifies some ellipses.
No.
The outside of the circle is always the same distance from the centre. The outside of an ellipse is not the same distance from the centre all the way round.
Any ellipse is an oval shape. But all ovals are not all ellipses, some are nothing in particular.
Yes; the circle is a special case of an ellipse.
No. Both foci are always inside the ellipse, otherwise you don't have an ellipse.
No. Both foci are always inside the ellipse, otherwise you don't have an ellipse.
No. Both foci are always inside the ellipse, otherwise you don't have an ellipse.
It is simply an elongated circle, possibly an oval but NOT an ellipse. It is not an ellipse because it has two straight sections. An ellipse is curved at all points along its perimeter.
No. A circle is a special kind of ellipse.
true
No.
No.
No.
They are notnecessarily the same. A circle is a subcategory of an ellipse, meaning that every single circle is guaranteed to be an ellipse, but not all ellipses will be a circle. Just like a square will be a rectangle, but not all rectangles will be squares. A circle requires that the radius remains constant throughout the entire circle, whereas an ellipse does not require this. It just has an extra requirement that disqualifies some ellipses.