Yes, you can, and there are infinitely many ways of doing so. 1) Connect the midpoints 2) Notice the parallelogram shape 3) Double the length of one of the sides, and draw it parallel to that side 4) Match the ends of that line to the midpoints. 5) Voila! A quadrilateral with the 4 points as midpoints.
the midpoints for points (-8, 5) and (2, -2) is (-3, 1.5)
Diagonals between two opposite corners, and a vertical line between midpoints of 2 opposite sides, and a horizontal line between midpoints of the other pair of sides.
5ft. (1.5 m)
exactly in the middle between 1 and 5 is 3, and between 4 and 5 is 4.5
Yes, you can, and there are infinitely many ways of doing so. 1) Connect the midpoints 2) Notice the parallelogram shape 3) Double the length of one of the sides, and draw it parallel to that side 4) Match the ends of that line to the midpoints. 5) Voila! A quadrilateral with the 4 points as midpoints.
the midpoints for points (-8, 5) and (2, -2) is (-3, 1.5)
Diagonals between two opposite corners, and a vertical line between midpoints of 2 opposite sides, and a horizontal line between midpoints of the other pair of sides.
No- the vertices of a rectangle are the four coordinates (corners) not the midpoints.
A line that connects the midpoints of a figure is a midsegment.
A pentagon has 5 sides whose midpoints form a star shape.
Only two, from the midpoints to midpoints of each of the two facing sides.
The difference between 4 and 5 is 1 and the difference between 1 and 5 is 4.
When yo connect the midpoints of THE SIDES OF squares you get a square.
4.5 is between 4 and 5
5ft. (1.5 m)
The difference between 4 and 5 or 4 - 5 is 1. 4 - 5 = 1 is the equation form.