To find the area of a rhombus, you can use the formula ( \text{Area} = \frac{1}{2} \times d_1 \times d_2 ), where ( d_1 ) and ( d_2 ) are the lengths of the diagonals. For a trapezoid, the area is calculated using the formula ( \text{Area} = \frac{1}{2} \times (b_1 + b_2) \times h ), where ( b_1 ) and ( b_2 ) are the lengths of the two parallel bases, and ( h ) is the height.
if those are the measurements then that is not a rhombus, rhombi are 4 sided shapesthat have all equal sides
yes
yes
No. All rhombi (rhombuses) are parallelograms but all parallelograms are not rhombi.
Not necessarily.
if those are the measurements then that is not a rhombus, rhombi are 4 sided shapesthat have all equal sides
Yes, all squares are rhombi (aka rhombuses), but all rhombi are not squares.
Yes, all rhombi are parallelograms. If you understand the concept "parallelogram" then you will know that rhombi
yes
yes
Rhombi are two dimensional, but the easiest way to find the area is to treat it like a parallelogram, or even a square. Just find Base x Height and you will get the area of a two dimensional rhombus, square, or parallelogram (among other polygons).Since volume is a three dimensional property, and rhombi are two dimensional, I will assume you just have an extruded rhombus. If I am correct, then you can just add the depth to that formula, giving you Base x Height x Depth.
Because all rhombi are parallelograms.
yes
No. All rhombi (rhombuses) are parallelograms but all parallelograms are not rhombi.
Rectangles, Squares, and Isosceles Trapeziods.
no they are not
No.