A square with 4 right angles and has a point of a triangle on the end of the square
A rhombus with 2 right angles is not possible. Only a rhombus with 4 right angles is possible, a square.
An impossibility but a square and a rectangle have 4 right angles
A square!
square
No
The Euclidean Parallel Axiom is as stated below: If a line segment intersects two straight lines forming two interior angles on the same side that sum to less than two right angles, then the two lines, if extended indefinitely, meet on that side on which the angles sum to less than two right angles. My source is linked below.
In folding at angles and creating triangles you are using trigonometry and geometry.
60 degrees; it is equilateral.
all three angles less than 90 degrees.
A rhombus normally has no right angles (at the vertices). If a rhombus has right angles (at the vertices), it is called a square. The diagonals of a rhombus meet at right angles.
a rhombus is a parallelogram with no right angles.
The diagonals of a rhombus intersect (meet) at right angles.
A rhombus has 4 equal sides. Its angles can be right angles, but don't have to be. A square is a type of rhombus.
No, it is the other way around: a square is a rhombus with right angles.
A rhombus has four congruent sides. The angles don't matter, but if they're right angles, then the rhombus is a square.
None, the total sum of angles in a rhombus is 360 degrees but none of them are right angles.
ALWAYSevery square is a rhombus, but every rhombus is not a square.A square must have right angles and a rhombus does not have to have those.A rhombus is a quadrilateral with equal length sides, and can have oblique angles or right angles. A square only has right angles. A rhombus with right angles is a square. Other rhombi are not squares.By these definitions, all squares are rhombi, but not all rhombi are squares
A rhombus does not have four right angles. A square has four right angles, as does a rectangle.
Yes a square always has 4 right angles but a rhombus never has any right angles.
A rhombus doesn't need any right angles to be a rhombus, although it can have them if it wants to. If a rhombus has right angles, then it's a square. And if it has one right angle, then it must have four of them.
A rhombus does not have right angles. A square always has right angles.