bob
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
Not necessarily. The only time that the angle bisector would bisect the opposite side is if you were bisecting the vertex angle of an isosceles triangle.
The diagonals of a rectangular shape will only bisect opposite angles if, in fact, the shape is a square. Otherwise they will not bisect them.
Yes
No.No.No.No.
bob
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in the rectangle.
Only in an equilateral triangle will bisectors of the three angles bisect the opposite sides. In an isosceles triangle, only the bisector of the one different angle will bisect the opposite side (between the identical angles).
Not necessarily. The only time that the angle bisector would bisect the opposite side is if you were bisecting the vertex angle of an isosceles triangle.
The diagonals will not always bisect opposite angles in a rectangle.
The diagonals of a rectangular shape will only bisect opposite angles if, in fact, the shape is a square. Otherwise they will not bisect them.
Not always. 1. The median to the base of an isosceles triangle bisects the vertex angle. 2. When the triangle is an equilateral triangle, then the medians bisect the interior angles of the triangle.
Diagonals never bisect sides. They join the ends of sides.In a rectangle, the diagonals always bisect each other.
Yes
Most figures.