Not necessarily. The definition for a rhombus is a polygon with four sides of equal length. Therefore, a square is a rhombus.
However, any rhombus not as square does have two same sized acute and obtuse angles.
rhombus
rhombus
A quadrilateral with two acute angles and all sides the same length is a rhombus. In a rhombus, opposite angles are equal, so if there are two acute angles, the other two angles must be obtuse, making a total of four angles. This property, along with having equal side lengths, characterizes the rhombus.
The figure you are describing is a rhombus. A rhombus has two sets of parallel sides, all sides of equal length, and features two acute angles and two obtuse angles. The properties of angles in a rhombus ensure that opposite angles are equal, with the sum of adjacent angles being 180 degrees.
That would be a Rhombus.
rhombus
A rhombus.
rhombus
A rhombus is your answer
rhombus
A quadrilateral with two acute angles and all sides the same length is a rhombus. In a rhombus, opposite angles are equal, so if there are two acute angles, the other two angles must be obtuse, making a total of four angles. This property, along with having equal side lengths, characterizes the rhombus.
It is a rhombus or a parallelogram
The figure you are describing is a rhombus. A rhombus has two sets of parallel sides, all sides of equal length, and features two acute angles and two obtuse angles. The properties of angles in a rhombus ensure that opposite angles are equal, with the sum of adjacent angles being 180 degrees.
That would be a Rhombus.
No. A rhombus has four sides - two sets of two parallel lines. It also has four angles - two acute and equal; two obtuse and equal.
It is a parallelogram and if all 4 sides are equal then it is a rhombus
obtuse angles are larger than 180 degrees. acute are smaller than 180. for example ina trangle, the exterior angles are obtuse and the inner angles are acute.