Square, rhombus and a kite all have perpendicular diagonals
Square and Rhombus. A Square is actually a Rhombus with right angles, so it would also be (technically) correct to just say "Rhombus". In a test it would probably be safer to say both, rather than getting too technical about it...
rhombus and a square
A square, a rhombus and a kite are three examples of quadrilaterals that have perpendicular diagonals that intersect each other at right angles.
No but the diagonals of a square, rhombus and a kite are perpendicular to each other
Quadrilaterals do not bisect each other. They could in special cases. In parallelograms (types of quadrilaterals), the diagonals bisect each other.
No but its diagonals are perpendicular to each other.
If the diagonals are congruent and are perpendicular bisectors of each other then the parallelogram is a square. If the diagonals are not congruent but are perpendicular bisectors of each other then the figure would be a rhombus.
It has two diagonals, and they are perpendicular to each other.
Parallelograms.
squares
No.
It is a rhombus whose diagonals are perpendicular and meeting each other at right angles.
No but its diagonals are perpendicular to each other