Parallelogram, trapezoid, rhombus and a kite are some of them Note that a square and a rectangle have diagonals of equal lengths
The diagonals of an isosceles trapezoid are equal in lengths but are not perpendicular to each other at right angles.
No. Even in the non-US use of the term (a quadrilateral with at least one set of parallel lines), the lengths of the parallel lines may not be the same, and/or the angles formed by each adjacent side may be different (as in a rhomboid), resulting in diagonals of extremely different lengths.Only in rectangles are diagonals "always" of equal length.
See if the diagonal measurements are equal, and see if the side lengths are equal. If both are true, it's a square. If only the diagonals are equal, it's a rectangle. If the diagonals are not equal, it's a non-orthogonal parallelogram.
An isosceles trapezoid is a 4 sided quadrilateral that has 1 pair of opposite parallel sides of different lengths and has 2 equal diagonals plus equal base angles.
A square and a rectangle both have diagonals of equal lengths
They are of different lenghts unless it is an isosceles trapezoid that will have equal lengths
Diagonals are normally equal in lengths
Yes the diagonals of a rectangle are equal in lengths
A square and a rectangle have diagonals of equal lengths
The 2 diagonals in an isosceles trapezoid are of equal lengths
Sometimes as when the parallelogram is in the form of a rectangle then its diagonals are of equal lengths.
Parallelogram, trapezoid, rhombus and a kite are some of them Note that a square and a rectangle have diagonals of equal lengths
The diagonals of an isosceles trapezoid are equal in lengths
True because the diagonals of a rectangle are equal in lengths
The diagonals of an isosceles trapezoid are equal in lengths but are not perpendicular to each other at right angles.
No. Even in the non-US use of the term (a quadrilateral with at least one set of parallel lines), the lengths of the parallel lines may not be the same, and/or the angles formed by each adjacent side may be different (as in a rhomboid), resulting in diagonals of extremely different lengths.Only in rectangles are diagonals "always" of equal length.