A kite has 2 pairs of equal sides.
There will be two pairs. It is possible for all four angles to be identical.
Two lines that intersect will create2 pairs of equal angles and if the lines are perpendicular the angles created will be right angles
1 pair of 2 angles
From Wikipedia: '...a kite, or deltoid, is a quadrilateral with two disjoint pairs of congruent adjacent sides, in contrast to a parallelogram, where the congruent sides are opposite.' In other words, a kite consists of two isosceles triangles joined at the base. Beginning with a particular isosceles triangle, it will always be possible to construct from it one kite that has equal diagonals (given that the kite may be either convex or concave). Hence an infinite number of kites do have equal diagonals, but many do not. A notable example of a kite that does have equal diagonals is a square.
A kite can have 1, 2 or 3 acute angles.
A kite has 2 pairs of equal sides.
It has one pair.
2.
2 pairs of equal angles
a parallelogram has two pairs of equal angles
One pair of opposite angles are equal in a kite and its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees.
Usually just two.
Base angles are equal and so that's 2 pairs of equal angles
There will be two pairs. It is possible for all four angles to be identical.
A rectangle has 4 right angles.
It has 2 pairs of opposite equal angles which are acute and obtuse.