A square is a rhombus with a right angle (90 degrees) at one corner.
Note:
That means that all four angles will be right angles, but in order to prove that
your rhombus is a square, it's only necessary to prove that one angle is.
The two squares, one inside and one outside the rhombus, serve to illustrate different geometric relationships. The inner square is typically inscribed within the rhombus, touching its sides at midpoints, while the outer square is circumscribed around the rhombus, touching its vertices. This arrangement helps in visualizing properties such as area, angles, and symmetry, as well as demonstrating how the dimensions of the rhombus relate to those of the squares. Overall, it provides a clearer understanding of the spatial relationships between these shapes.
Rain is a very dangerous while dew is not bad at all
no a rectangle is very different from a rhombus because a rhombus different angles than a rectangle
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 four sides that are all equal. Different types of parallelograms and quadrilaterals are two examples of a rhombus.
Because a rhombus is a shape and a kite is a object that is the shape of a rhombus. (only sometimes they are not a rhombus)
A rhombus has no right angles
No, a rhombus is thinner than a diamond.
Yes, a square is a rhombus, but a rhombus is not a square. Yes, a rhombus has four sides of equal length. A square is a rhombus with four right angles.
The answer will depend on different from WHAT?
a square is straight and a rhombus is tilted
All four sides of a rhombus are the same length.