Yes... The rhombus's diagonals intersect to form right angles... But I'm not 100% sure..
Square and Rhombus
An isosceles trapezoid will have diagonals of equal length but will never contain right angles by definition. A square and rectangle will have diagonals of equal length but will contain 4 right angles. A rhombus and any other parallelogram that does not contain right angles will not have diagonals of equal length.
A Rhombus * * * * * WRONG! A rhombus does not have equal diagonals. If it did it would be a square! The shape is a special case of a kite.
The intersection of the diagonals of a kite form 90 degree (right) angles. This means that they are perpendicular. The longer diagonal of a kite bisects the shorter one. This means that the longer diagonal cuts the shorter one in half. It is a 4 sided quadrilateral Its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees It has no parallel sides Its adjacent sides are equal It has 1 pair of opposite angles that are equal It has 2 diagonals that intersect each other at right angles Its perimeter is the sum of its 4 sides Its area formula is: 0.5 times product of its diagonals
Rhombus rhombus
A square, a rhombus and a kite have diagonals that intersect each other at right angles.
A Quadrilateral Kite!
Rhombus and square are the only quadrilaterals whose diagonals bisect the angles of the quadrilateral. In both these quadrilaterals, the diagonals intersect at right angles, dividing each angle into two equal parts.
No because a kite is a 4 sided quadrilateral with two diagonals of different lengths that intersect each other at right angles.
Yes... The rhombus's diagonals intersect to form right angles... But I'm not 100% sure..
Only a chevron has diagonals intersecting outside the shape. The diagonals of a symmetric chevron will intersect at right angles.
No but the diagonals of a square intersect at right angles
The 2 diagonals of a rhombus intersect at right angles
If the diagonals of a quadrilateral are perpendicular to each other, then the quadrilateral is a square.Or a kite.
Yes.
The diagonals of a rhombus intersect (meet) at right angles.