rhombus
A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are congruent. In terms of triangles, a kite can be formed by two congruent right triangles sharing a hypotenuse, or by two congruent isosceles triangles sharing a base. Additionally, a kite can also be formed by combining two congruent scalene triangles with a shared side.
rhombus
you might get a kite if the triangles are the same then you might get a rectangle
Two scalene right triangles that are congruent, that is, that have identical size and shape, if joined together to form a quadrilateral, will form a rectangle.
There are two types of quadrilaterals that are formed when two congruent equilateral triangles are joined. These shapes are rhombus and parallelogram.
The name of the shapes formed are triangles.
They will form a 4 sided quadrilateral if the triangles are the same sizes.
A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are congruent. In terms of triangles, a kite can be formed by two congruent right triangles sharing a hypotenuse, or by two congruent isosceles triangles sharing a base. Additionally, a kite can also be formed by combining two congruent scalene triangles with a shared side.
rhombus
Two triangles
You can divide a quadrilateral up into as many triangles as you want, but at least two.
you might get a kite if the triangles are the same then you might get a rectangle
Yes. They can form a kite.
Two scalene right triangles that are congruent, that is, that have identical size and shape, if joined together to form a quadrilateral, will form a rectangle.
There are two types of quadrilaterals that are formed when two congruent equilateral triangles are joined. These shapes are rhombus and parallelogram.
This result follows from the theorem that the sum of the angles of a triangle is 180 degrees. Drawing a diagonal in the quadrilateral splits it into two triangles and the angles of the triangles together combine to form the angles of the quadrilateral.
The area of a triangle is half the area of a quadrilateral when the quadrilateral is divided into two triangles by drawing a diagonal. Since both triangles share the same base and height (the height being perpendicular to the base), the area of each triangle is equal to half the area of the quadrilateral. Therefore, for any quadrilateral, its area is double that of each of the triangles formed by its diagonal.