All quadrilaterals have two pairs of adjacent (ie next to one another) sides. Diagonals intersect at right angles suggest a kite (or square).
A kite fits this description.
Two pairs of equal sides and four right angles.
It can be :- 1- a parallelogram 2- Square if diagonals are perpendicular and congruent 3- Rectangle if diagonals are congruent 4- Rhombus if diagonals are perpendicular
It can be a square or a rhombus
No, it doesn't have to be. A quadrilateral can definitely be a parallelogram only if: - Both pairs of opposite sides are parallel. - Both pairs of opposite sides are congruent. - One pair of opposite sides are both congruent and parallel. - Both pairs of opposite angles are congruent. - The diagonals bisect each other.
The quadrilateral you are referring to is called a kite. A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length, and one pair of diagonals that are not equal in length. Additionally, a kite has two axes of symmetry, which are lines that divide the kite into two congruent halves.
Square (also rhombus)
Kite is a geometry term for a quadrilateral shape. The shape has two pairs of adjacent sides that are congruent. The diagonals are perpendicular.
No. A kite is a quadrilateral (4 sided figure) with two pairs of adjacent sides of equal length; its diagonals are perpendicular. A triangle has 3 sides.
Theorem A: A quadrilateral is a parallelogram if its opposite sides are congruent. Theorem B: A quadrilateral is a parallelogram if a pair of opposite sides is parallel and congruent. Theorem C: A quadrilateral is a parallelogram if its diagonals bisect each other. Theorem D: A quadrilateral is a parallelogram if both pairs of opposite angles are congruent.
It is a 4 sided quadrilateral shape having 2 pairs of parallel sides and 4 interior angles of 90 degrees as well as 2 diagonals
False. If both pairs of opposite angles of a quadrilateral are congruent then the quadrilateral is a parallelogram.