Square and rectangle.
Only in squares and rectangles. In a rhombus, the consecutive angle is supplementary (sums to 180 degrees).
A.A 10° angle is congruent to a 10° angle.B.Congruent angles always add up to 90°.C.A congruent angle is always 90°.
A kite or various miscellaneous quadrilaterals with no particular name.
The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.
Yes, all quadrilaterals with four pairs of corresponding angles equal are congruent. This is because if two quadrilaterals have equal corresponding angles, they can be transformed into one another through rotation, translation, or reflection, maintaining the same shape and size. This property is a consequence of the Angle-Angle (AA) similarity criterion, which implies congruence when applied to quadrilaterals.
Only in squares and rectangles. In a rhombus, the consecutive angle is supplementary (sums to 180 degrees).
The corresponding and alternate angles
A.A 10° angle is congruent to a 10° angle.B.Congruent angles always add up to 90°.C.A congruent angle is always 90°.
A kite or various miscellaneous quadrilaterals with no particular name.
no..for instance a parallelogram
The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.The angles between the sides that are parallel are congruent.
A rectangle has two pairs of parallel and congruent sides. An equilateral rectangle, or square, has four equal sides. Other quadrilaterals include trapezoids, which have two adjacent and equal sides, parallelograms, which have two pairs of parallel and congruent sides, and rhombi, which have four equal sides. (The a rectangle is a type of parallelogram. What differentiates it is angle configuration. A rhombus is likewise differentiated from a square by angle configuration.)
It is a rhombus or a parallelogram
No. You get two congruent angles.
Always.
A trapezoid!
yes, always by ~ Ash