Two.
It could be a square, but consider the following congruent & perpendicular 'diagonals of a quadrilateral (you will have to connect the endpoints of the diagonals, yourself, as it cannot be drawn in text): . _|___ . | . | . | If the two diagonals, also bisect each other, then it's a square, otherwise it is not.
The 'long' diagonals are those two that run from one corner square diagonally across the board to the square in the opposite corner. They are the diagonals a1-h8 & h1-a8.
A square has two diagonals that bisect each other at 90 degrees
A square and a rectangle are two of them.
Two.
two
It could be a square, but consider the following congruent & perpendicular 'diagonals of a quadrilateral (you will have to connect the endpoints of the diagonals, yourself, as it cannot be drawn in text): . _|___ . | . | . | If the two diagonals, also bisect each other, then it's a square, otherwise it is not.
The 'long' diagonals are those two that run from one corner square diagonally across the board to the square in the opposite corner. They are the diagonals a1-h8 & h1-a8.
A square, a rhombus and a kite all have perpendicular diagonals that intersect at right angles
A square has two diagonals that bisect each other at 90 degrees
A square and a rectangle are two of them.
It has 2 Diagonals!!!
A square has diagonals that split the angles into two 45-degree parts, thus bisecting them.
because it has two pairs of congruent sides, the diagonals are equal in length, and the diagonals bisect each other.
It can be :- 1- a parallelogram 2- Square if diagonals are perpendicular and congruent 3- Rectangle if diagonals are congruent 4- Rhombus if diagonals are perpendicular
90 degrees - the parallelogram is a rectangle (or a square) if the diagonals are equal.