A=1/2d1d2
No, they do not. Only the longer diagonal bisects the shorter diagonal.
A quadrilateral in which adjacent angles are congruent is called a kite. In a kite, the adjacent angles formed by the intersecting diagonals are congruent. This property distinguishes a kite from other types of quadrilaterals, such as a parallelogram or a rhombus, where adjacent angles are not necessarily congruent. Kites have specific properties and characteristics that make them a unique type of quadrilateral in geometry.
Not for every parallelogram. Only for a rhombus (diamond) or square will the diagonals bisect the opposite angles they connect, and diagonals are perpendicular. In rectangles, the diagonals do not bisect the angles and are notperpendicular, but they do bisect each other.
only when the rectangle is a square
A kite has only one line of rotational symmetry, as it is only the same if it is tilted once. (back to its normal position).
No - only one of the diagonals bisects the angles of the shape.
Same as a square, except the kite only occupies half the space. (Draw a picture if you have to.) So, 6x8 = 48, divided by two is 24 [sq. cm]
No, they do not. Only the longer diagonal bisects the shorter diagonal.
kite
Kite
Perpendicular and the one for which each endpoint touches only sides of equal length bisects the other.
No, they do not have that property. The quadrilaterals that have that property are the rhombus (and subsequently, the square) and the kite. The only property I'm aware of diagonals of a trapezoid having is the fact that they cut each other in the same ratio, which happens to be the ratio between the lengths of the parallel sides.
A kite is different from a rhombus in a few ways: * Kites have two pairs of adjacent legs that are congruent, and each pair is a separate length; a rhombus has four congruent sides. * A kite and rhombus both have perpendicular diagonals, but in a kite, only the diagonal between the pairs of sides (the diagonal between two sides of different length) is bisected; the other is not. Also, the diagonals bisect all of the angles of a rhombus; only the angles in the middle of the pairs of sides (angles with two legs of equal length) are bisected. * Only the angles between the pairs of sides are congruent in a kite; a rhombus has 2 pairs of congruent opposite angles. You can also think of a rhombus as a combination between a kite and a parallelogram, the same way you can think of a square as a combination of a rectangle and a rhombus. Hope this helps!
They must meet at right angles and only one of them must bisect the other. (if both bisect one another, the quadrilateral will be a square).
no, there are only 5 diagonals in a pentagon.
Quadrilaterals only have two diagonals because they only have four vertices.
Quadrilaterals only have two diagonals because they only have four vertices.