One difference is that a square has right angles, but a rhombus only has acute and obtuse angles. A similarity is that if you tilt a square it turns into a rhombus. Another similarity is that they are both Quadrangles. Another difference is that Rhombus lines are slanted.
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A square is always a rhombus, but a rhombus is notalways a square.
Is a rhombus.
Well a rhombus is sometimes and square. but a square is always a rhombus
Very clever question! The answer is yes, they can. A square is, in fact, a rhombus. It's a special case of one. A rhombus is a quadrilateral with four equal sides. A square fits that description except it also has four equal angles. So, if you have two identical squares, you can actually say that you have a rhombus that is congruent to a square! I hope your teacher didn't mark you wrong if you answered "no." If, however, you have two figures, one a square and the other a rhombus with one pair of obtuse angles and one pair of acute angles, then the answer is no.Rhombus:Rhombus is a quadrilateral with four equal sides.Square:Square is a quadrilateral with four equal sides and angle between the adjacent sides are 90o exactly.This implies that square is always a rhombus.But a rhombus need not be a square always.A rhombus can be a square if the angles between the adjacent sides are 90o exactly.So, a rhombus and square can be congruent if their sides are equal and the angle between the adjacent sides of a rhombus are 90o exactly. Source: www.icoachmath.com
Yes, a square is a rhombus. Don't get confused though, because a rhombus isn't a square. A square has 4 right angles, and a rhombus does not.