Yes, the diagonals of a kite do cross at 90 degrees. In a kite, one diagonal bisects the other, and the angles formed at the intersection are right angles. This property is a key characteristic of kites, distinguishing them from other quadrilaterals.
The shape you're describing is a kite. A kite has two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length, and its diagonals intersect at right angles (90 degrees). However, the lengths of the diagonals are not equal, which distinguishes it from a rhombus.
None but the diagonals intersect at 90 degrees
90 degrees
A square, a rhombus and a kite have diagonals that intersect each other at 90 degrees.
Not always but they are perpendicular in a square, a rhombus and a kite in that the diagonals intersect each other at 90 degrees
A kite
None but the diagonals intersect at 90 degrees
Yes the diagonals of a kite bisect each other at 90 degrees.
A kite.
90 degrees
It is a kite that has diagonals that intersect each other at 90 degrees.
No.
A square, a rhombus and a kite have diagonals that intersect each other at 90 degrees.
No but the diagonals of a square, rhombus and a kite do intersect each other at 90 degrees
Not always but they are perpendicular in a square, a rhombus and a kite in that the diagonals intersect each other at 90 degrees
No but they do intersect each other at 90 degrees
The diagonals of a kite are perpendicular and therefore bisect each other at 90 degrees