Yes. In a rhombus (and in a square), the opposite angles that each diagonal connects are bisected by the diagonal.
a rhombus
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in a rectangle.
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.
A rhombus has several features. its diagonals will bisect its opposite angles, and the opposite angles will measure equally.
rhombus
No, a rectangle's diagonals do not bisect opposite angles.
In rhombuses and squares the diagonals bisect opposite angles.
Yes they do
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
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
A shape in which the diagonals bisect two of its angles is a rhombus. In a rhombus, the diagonals not only bisect the angles at the vertices but also are perpendicular to each other, dividing the rhombus into four right triangles. This property is specific to rhombuses and can also apply to squares, which are a special type of rhombus.