The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in a rectangle.
Square
always
A rhombus (4 congruent sides, diagonals perpendicular)that is not also a square (no right angles), andis also a parallelogram (opposite sides parallel and congruent, opposite angles congruent). It is also a quadrilateral, which has 4 sides.
No. It is false. If both of those conditions are met, then the quadrilateral is a square.
Not for every parallelogram. Only for a rhombus (diamond) or square will the diagonals bisect the opposite angles they connect, and diagonals are perpendicular. In rectangles, the diagonals do not bisect the angles and are notperpendicular, but they do bisect each other.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in a rectangle.
The diagonals of a rectangular shape will only bisect opposite angles if, in fact, the shape is a square. Otherwise they will not bisect them.
Not unless the rectangle is square.
Either a square or rectangle fit this description.
No, but in a square they do bisect the angles
The diagonals of a rectangle bisect the angles only if the rectangle is a square.
Yes. In a rhombus (and in a square), the opposite angles that each diagonal connects are bisected by the diagonal.
Only for a square or rhombus (diamond shape). The diagonals of a rectangle bisect each other, but are not perpendicular and do not bisect the opposite angles they join.
yes
No, but the diagonals of a square does bisects its interior angles.
The diagonals of a square (which always bisect each other) are the same length.