A pair of quadrilaterals, of any kind, will be similar if their sides are in some constant ratio - other than 1 - and their angles are the same.
always.
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
Yes
the sum of interior angles is 360 degrese and the trapezoid has 1 pair of parallel sides
Most times but not always as for example a trapezoid would be an exception unless it was an isosceles trapezoid
A pair of quadrilaterals, of any kind, will be similar if their sides are in some constant ratio - other than 1 - and their angles are the same.
not always
If this concerns quadrilaterals and the fact that the specified quadrilateral must ALWAYS have exactly one pair of opposite angles, then the shape is classified as a kite.* * *I'm in grade nine geometry classes. It's great fun. *slight sarcasm*
Always : )
always
always.
No, angles that form a linear pair are supplementary.
Yes
A quadrilateral that could have a 45-degree vertex angle is a kite. In a kite, the two pairs of adjacent sides are congruent, and one pair of opposite angles is congruent. Therefore, if one of the angles is 45 degrees, the opposite angle would also be 45 degrees. This makes a kite one of the quadrilaterals that could have a 45-degree vertex angle.
the sum of interior angles is 360 degrese and the trapezoid has 1 pair of parallel sides
Supplementary angles are angles whose sum always equals 180 degrees.