Each side S = square root ( 152 + 202 ) = 25
The perimeter will then be 4 x S = 100
No. The diagonals of rhombus are not equal.
No. The diagonals of rhombus are not equal.
No. If they were equal the rhombus would become a square.
A rhombus has 4 equal sides and the diagonals are always perpendicular
The perimeter of a rhombus is calculated by adding the lengths of all four sides. Since all sides of a rhombus are equal, the formula for the perimeter is ( P = 4s ), where ( s ) is the length of one side. Given that the perimeter is 28 inches, you can find the length of one side by dividing the perimeter by 4: ( s = 28 \div 4 = 7 ) inches. Therefore, the length of one side of the rhombus is 7 inches.
No. The diagonals of rhombus are not equal.
No. The diagonals of rhombus are not equal.
No. The diagonals of rhombus are not equal.
No. If they were equal the rhombus would become a square.
A rhombus
The rhombus will have 2 equal opposite angles of 95 degrees and 2 equal opposite angles of 85 degrees with 4 equal sides of 7.5 cm then by using the cosine rule in trigonometry its diagonals work out as 11.05916005 cm and 10.13385311 cm
The answer depends on which aspect of a rhombus. Its sides are of equal length but its diagonals are NOT!
A rhombus has 4 equal sides and the diagonals are always perpendicular
The perimeter of a rhombus is calculated by adding the lengths of all four sides. Since all sides of a rhombus are equal, the formula for the perimeter is ( P = 4s ), where ( s ) is the length of one side. Given that the perimeter is 28 inches, you can find the length of one side by dividing the perimeter by 4: ( s = 28 \div 4 = 7 ) inches. Therefore, the length of one side of the rhombus is 7 inches.
No but its diagonals bisect each other at 90 degrees
Not in general. The diagonals of a rectangle are equal length. A rhombus that is also a rectangle would be a square.
A shape with four sides and perpendicular diagonals is called a rhombus. In a rhombus, all sides are of equal length, and the diagonals bisect each other at right angles. Additionally, the diagonals are not necessarily of equal length, which distinguishes a rhombus from a square.