Suppose on of the angles is A degrees where 0 < A < 90. Then the opposite angle is also A degrees and
the two adjacent angles are (180 - A) degrees.
Yes since a square is a type of rhombus by definition, and it has four ninty degree angles, we have an example.
ms. claudia always told me that a square can be a rhombus but a rhombus cant be a square. another way is a square has 4 90 degree angles but a rhombus has 4 45 degree angles, because all figures must always ALWAYS ALWAYS add up to 360 degrees.
No, a rectangle must have 4 90 degree angles
rhombus
A rhombus may be a square or just a rhombus (a rhombus is merely called a rhombus when there are no 90 degree angles).
A rhombus has 4 sides of equal length and may be crooked and a rectangle must have four 90 degree angles. A square is both a rectangle and a rhombus.
A rhombus would fit the given description
360
A rhombus has 4 sides of equal length and may be crooked and a rectangle must have four 90 [[Q/Whats the difference between a rectangle and a rhombus#|degree]] angles. A square is both a rectangle and a rhombus.
it is a rhombus whose angles are not 90 degree unlike the square
A rhombus has 2 equal opposite acute angles and 2 equal opposite obtuse angle. The 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees
No.