The answer depends on the measure of WHAT! Side length, angles, length of diagonals, area? And the answers to these depend on what information is given.
rhombus
No.
rhombus
A rhombus is a quadrilateral where all sides have the same length. Rhombuses have some special properties that help you determine their measurements. Sides: if you know the length of one side, you know the length of the rest of the sides. Angles: the angles which are adjacent to each other in a rhombus are supplements to each other. So if you have a rhombus with angles A, B, C and D, then A + B = 180 degrees, and A + D = 180 degrees. This also means that B = D. And because the sum of the angles of any quadilateral is 360 degrees, A = C. Area: The area of a rhombus is the base * height, where the base is an arbitrary side of the rhombus and the height is the distance between the base and the opposite side of the rhombus. If you draw a perpendicular line between the base and the opposite side, the length of that line will be the height.
The answer depends on the measure of WHAT! Side length, angles, length of diagonals, area? And the answers to these depend on what information is given.
rhombus
No.
rhombus
A rhombus is a quadrilateral where all sides have the same length. Rhombuses have some special properties that help you determine their measurements. Sides: if you know the length of one side, you know the length of the rest of the sides. Angles: the angles which are adjacent to each other in a rhombus are supplements to each other. So if you have a rhombus with angles A, B, C and D, then A + B = 180 degrees, and A + D = 180 degrees. This also means that B = D. And because the sum of the angles of any quadilateral is 360 degrees, A = C. Area: The area of a rhombus is the base * height, where the base is an arbitrary side of the rhombus and the height is the distance between the base and the opposite side of the rhombus. If you draw a perpendicular line between the base and the opposite side, the length of that line will be the height.
The answer depends on the information given.Area = s^2*sin(x) where s is the length of a side and x is the measure of any of the interior angles of the rhombus.
It depends on what the formula is for (perimeter, are, length of side, height, angles, etc) and what information you have (same list).
If all of the sides of the kite have the same length, and it happens to be the sameas the length of each side of the rhombus, andeach angle of the kite happens to bethe same size as one of the angles of the rhombus, thenthey can be congruent.
Since the diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular and bisect each other, then we can use the Pythagorean theorem to find the length of the side of the rhombus. So in the right triangle, whose length of the legs are 6 and 8 centimeters, the hypotenuse length (the length of the side of the rhombus) is √(62 + 82) = √(36 + 64) = √100 = 10 cm.
You need more information: the length of a side. Then, since the diagonals bisect one another at right angles, you can use Pythagoras's theorem to calculate their lengths.
A rhombus or a square. In rectangles (unequal side length) this does not occur.
A rhombus. Commonly referred to as a "diamond".