Yes they do,because if both diagonal lines cross over and perform a cross is were the point in the middle meets.
Each diagonal of a rhombus would never bisect a pair of opposite angles, but the diagonals are perpendicular to each other
The diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular. A rhombus is a special kind of parallelogram. It has the characteristics of a parallelogram (both pairs of opposite sides parallel, opposite sides are congruent, opposite angles are congruent, diagonals bisect each other.) It also has special characteristics. It has four congruent sides. So it looks like a lopsided or squished square. Its diagonals are perpendicular. Another property: each diagonal bisects two angles of the rhombus.
A rhombus is never a kite.A rhombus is a parallelogram with all its sides equal in length. Opposite angles are therefore equal and the rhombus is symmetrical about each of its diagonals.A kite is a quadrilateral having two pairs of adjacent sides equal in length. Only one pair of opposite angles is equal and the kite is symmetrical about the line that bisects the unequal opposite angles. A kite does not have any parallel sides.
A rhombus has 4 interior angles and opposite angles are equal
A diagonal joining opposite angles is the principal diagonal. It may or may not bisect the angles, and that does not affect its name.
Yes.
Yes. In a rhombus (and in a square), the opposite angles that each diagonal connects are bisected by the diagonal.
Yes: one of them, but the other diagonal does not.
Yes they do,because if both diagonal lines cross over and perform a cross is were the point in the middle meets.
isn't it a rhombus ? the ones that are like a slanted square ? because there are no right angles but each diagonal bisects the corners.
60 and 120 degrees.
The length of the rhombus is equal to the length of the diagonal formed by the bisector of the 2 opposite acute angles.
Each diagonal of a rhombus would never bisect a pair of opposite angles, but the diagonals are perpendicular to each other
I'm a little rhombus, short and stout...
Any regular polygon with an even number of sides will have diagonals that satisfy this requirement.
The diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular. A rhombus is a special kind of parallelogram. It has the characteristics of a parallelogram (both pairs of opposite sides parallel, opposite sides are congruent, opposite angles are congruent, diagonals bisect each other.) It also has special characteristics. It has four congruent sides. So it looks like a lopsided or squished square. Its diagonals are perpendicular. Another property: each diagonal bisects two angles of the rhombus.