It will always be one. If all angles are congruent, there will be four right angles, forming a rectangle. A rectangle is also a parallelogram.It will always be one. If all angles are congruent, there will be four right angles, forming a rectangle. A rectangle is also a parallelogram.It will always be one. If all angles are congruent, there will be four right angles, forming a rectangle. A rectangle is also a parallelogram.It will always be one. If all angles are congruent, there will be four right angles, forming a rectangle. A rectangle is also a parallelogram.
Angles having the same measure in degrees irrespective of how large the arms of one are compared to another are said to be congruent angles
All rhombuses have two pairs of congruent angles (opposite angles are congruent to one another - a square is a special case type of rhombus in which all four angles are congruent).
Exactly the same because they are both congruent
In general a rhombus has one opposite pair of congruent acute angles and one opposite pair of congruent obtuse angles. A square, however, is a rhombus with four right angles.
A square is the parallelogram that has all sides congruent. A square also has four angles that are all right angles.
0 degrees F.
Each interior angle = sum of angles/number of sides
You can classify triangles by:Whether one of their angles is greater than 90 degrees, equal to 90 degrees, or all angles are less than 90 degreesWhether they have two or three congruent angles (equivalent to having two or three congruent sides)I think that's about it.
Yes. If you don't believe me, then you can draw one yourself.
Any polygon with an even number of sides (vertices) in which at least one pair of opposite angles are of the same measure.
It is 60 degrees and it is an equilateral triangle.