The answer depends on what information you have.
You would need to use the formulae for the distance between two points to check that all 4 sides were the same length. If so, the polygon is a rhombus. If you wish to exclude squares (which are technically rhombi), you would need to check that the gradients of any two adjacent sides did not multiply to -1, since if it did the sides are perpendicular and the rhombus is a square..
A rhombus is a 4 sided quadrilateral polygon
To determine if a parallelogram on a coordinate grid is a rhombus, check if all four sides are of equal length. You can calculate the distance between each pair of adjacent vertices using the distance formula. Additionally, since the diagonals of a rhombus bisect each other at right angles, you can verify that the slopes of the diagonals are negative reciprocals of each other. If both conditions are met, the parallelogram is a rhombus.
A rhombus is first a polygon, then a quadrilateral, parallelogram, and finally a rhombus.
A longer rhombus
A rhombus
Yes...in generalYes a rhombus is a 4 sided polygon
A rhombus is a polygon.
A rhombus is a quadrangle, which is a polygon. So a rhombus is both.
Yes A rhombus is a regular polygon
No but a rhombus is a polygon. A polygon can have three of more sides, and these can be of different lengths.
No. It is a polygon.
A rhombus is a 4 sided quadrilateral polygon
To determine if a parallelogram on a coordinate grid is a rhombus, check if all four sides are of equal length. You can calculate the distance between each pair of adjacent vertices using the distance formula. Additionally, since the diagonals of a rhombus bisect each other at right angles, you can verify that the slopes of the diagonals are negative reciprocals of each other. If both conditions are met, the parallelogram is a rhombus.
A rhombus is first a polygon, then a quadrilateral, parallelogram, and finally a rhombus.
irregular polygon
A rhombus is always an example of a polygon.
A longer rhombus