They both have parallel lines and they have only 2 sides that match up. Also a square is a rhombus and a rectangle, so a rhombus can be a rectangle, but a rhombus cannot be a square and either can a rectangle.
Square
* Square * Rhombus * Rectangle * Parallelograma parallelogram or a rhombus, square, rectangle
A square
If it's a rhombus and not a square. I fail to see the difficulty here. Every square is a rhombus, but not every rhombus is a square.
A square and a trapezoid
At a 45 degree angle, it becomes a rhombus, and if either the height or width becomes longer than the other, then it becomes a rectangle.
Parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus and square.Parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus and square.Parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus and square.Parallelogram, rectangle, rhombus and square.
None of them cannot. If you have a rectangle, a rhombus, and a square, then you have three parallelograms. You also have two rectangles, two rhombera (rhombuses), and three quadrilaterals.
square rectangle rhombus
A rhombus can be a rectangle if it is a square.
Not a quadrilateral. But "Yes" to a rhombus and a rectangle. And, since a square is a rectangle as well as a rhombus, a square as well.
Yes, inasmuch that they are all classed as 4 sided quadrilaterals
YesUsing the mathematical definitions, a rectangle can sometimes be a rhombus if it is a square. A square is both a rectangle and a rhombus.However, in everyday parlance, some people may consider that a square is not a rectangle or a rhombus.
All four sides of a rhombus has to be equal, hence rectangle is not a rhombus. A square is in fact a rhombus with right angles.
A rectangle is only a rhombus if it's a square
a rectangle does. a typical rhombus does not, if it does it is a square.