Any regular polygon with an even number of sides will have diagonals that satisfy this requirement.
Yes.
A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. It has one pair of opposite angles that are equal and typically features an axis of symmetry along the line connecting the vertices of the unequal angles. Kites are also characterized by their diagonal properties, where one diagonal bisects the other at a right angle.
In mathematics, a kite is a type of quadrilateral characterized by having two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. Additionally, one pair of opposite angles formed by the diagonals is congruent. Kites also have perpendicular diagonals, with one diagonal bisecting the other, and the longer diagonal bisects the angles at the vertices where the equal sides meet.
A quadrilateral kite, often simply referred to as a kite, is a type of quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. It typically has one pair of opposite angles that are equal and a diagonal that bisects the other diagonal at right angles. The shape resembles a diamond or a bowtie, with a pointed top and bottom. The symmetry of the kite is prominent, as it can be folded along its vertical axis.
A rhombus has a pair of opposite equal acute angles and a pair of opposite equal obtuse angles and the four angles add up to 360 degrees.
no
Yes: one of them, but the other diagonal does not.
Yes.
Each diagonal of a rhombus would never bisect a pair of opposite angles, but the diagonals are perpendicular to each other
A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. It has one pair of opposite angles that are equal and typically features an axis of symmetry along the line connecting the vertices of the unequal angles. Kites are also characterized by their diagonal properties, where one diagonal bisects the other at a right angle.
In mathematics, a kite is a type of quadrilateral characterized by having two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. Additionally, one pair of opposite angles formed by the diagonals is congruent. Kites also have perpendicular diagonals, with one diagonal bisecting the other, and the longer diagonal bisects the angles at the vertices where the equal sides meet.
No. In general it does not. Only if the rectangle is, in fact, a square.
A quadrilateral kite, often simply referred to as a kite, is a type of quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length. It typically has one pair of opposite angles that are equal and a diagonal that bisects the other diagonal at right angles. The shape resembles a diamond or a bowtie, with a pointed top and bottom. The symmetry of the kite is prominent, as it can be folded along its vertical axis.
Both are quadrilaterals. Both have two pairs of side of equal length. In a kite they are adjacent sides, in a rectangle they are opposite. A kite has one pair of equal angles, all of a rectangle's angles are equal. In a kite, one diagonals bisects the other, in a rectangle both do.
The diagonals of a square are perpendicular (they intersect and form right angles). But they are angles bisectors since they bisect each pair of opposite angles. A perpendicular bisector actually bisects a side of a figure.
A rhombus has a pair of opposite equal acute angles and a pair of opposite equal obtuse angles and the four angles add up to 360 degrees.
It has one pair of opposite angles that are equal but not two.