Yes.
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.
This shape has only one pair of opposite sides and no right angles: <
It has two pairs of angles. Each pair of opposite angles is equal.
One pair of opposite angle is greater than a right angle.
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
No. In general it does not. Only if the rectangle is, in fact, a square.
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.
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 rhombus are lines drawn from one corner, or vertex, to the opposite one. They have two important properties. 1. Diagonals bisects a pair of opposite angles. 2. Diagonals are !!perpendicular!!
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.
The intersection of the diagonals of a kite form 90 degree (right) angles. This means that they are perpendicular. The longer diagonal of a kite bisects the shorter one. This means that the longer diagonal cuts the shorter one in half. It is a 4 sided quadrilateral Its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees It has no parallel sides Its adjacent sides are equal It has 1 pair of opposite angles that are equal It has 2 diagonals that intersect each other at right angles Its perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides Its area formula is: 0.5 times product of its diagonals
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.