The geometric figure known as a kite is, by definition, a quadrilateral.
The toy that flies in the air known as a kite can have pretty much any shape imaginable, many of which are not quadrilaterals.
Quadrilateral is the broader term. All kites are quadrilaterals, but not all quadrilaterals are kites.
You could say parallelogram or rhombus.
The quadrilateral is a 4-sided polygon, quadrilaterals consist of kites, trapezoids, squares, rectangles, rhombuses, and parallelograms. The regular quadrilateral polygon is the square.
Yes, a kite is a type of a quadrilateral because it has 4 sides. Another perspective: A kite is a quadrilateral if it has 4 sides. Not all kites are 4-sided.
Yes
No. There are many counterexamples including trapezoids and kites.
No. A kite is also a quadrilateral, but every quadrilateral may not be a kite. You could call a kite a quadrilateral also, but not vice versa.
The geometric shape, known as a kite, must be a quadrilateral.
Quadrilateral is the broader term. All kites are quadrilaterals, but not all quadrilaterals are kites.
Yes, because it has 4 sides
There is no one type. Examples of quadrilaterals that are not parallelograms are trapezoids and kites.
You could say parallelogram or rhombus.
The quadrilateral is a 4-sided polygon, quadrilaterals consist of kites, trapezoids, squares, rectangles, rhombuses, and parallelograms. The regular quadrilateral polygon is the square.
Yes, a kite is a type of a quadrilateral because it has 4 sides. Another perspective: A kite is a quadrilateral if it has 4 sides. Not all kites are 4-sided.
Yes
A rectangle (or square), isosceles trapezium and some kites.
Squares, rectangles, rhombi, kites and arrowheads do. Other parallelograms and general quadrilaterals do not.