That may be the longest description of a squarethat I have ever heard.
It is a rhombus or a parallelogram
Parallelogram
* both pairs of opposite sides are parallel * both pairs of opposite sides are congruent * both pairs of opposite angles are congruent * one pair of opposite sides are parallel and congruent * both diagonals bisect each other * all consecutive angle pairs are supplementary
draw a quadrilateral that has no parallel sides no congruent sides and no right angle
A rhombus is not defined as a congruent angle; rather, it is a type of quadrilateral where all four sides are of equal length. In a rhombus, opposite angles are congruent, and adjacent angles are supplementary. Therefore, while angles in a rhombus can be congruent, the shape itself is not classified as a congruent angle.
It is a rhombus or a parallelogram
Parallelogram
* both pairs of opposite sides are parallel * both pairs of opposite sides are congruent * both pairs of opposite angles are congruent * one pair of opposite sides are parallel and congruent * both diagonals bisect each other * all consecutive angle pairs are supplementary
draw a quadrilateral that has no parallel sides no congruent sides and no right angle
A rhombus, or a square if there is a 90o angle.
A rhombus, or a square if there is a 90o angle
Yes (or its special case, a square).
A rhombus is not defined as a congruent angle; rather, it is a type of quadrilateral where all four sides are of equal length. In a rhombus, opposite angles are congruent, and adjacent angles are supplementary. Therefore, while angles in a rhombus can be congruent, the shape itself is not classified as a congruent angle.
draw a diagonal through opposite corners of the quadrilateral. This makes two triangles. Prove the triangles are congruent using SSA (side side angle) congruence. Then show that the other two sides of the quadrilater must be congruent to each other, so it is 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.
No, a quadrilateral with congruent diagonals but no right angles is not necessarily a parallelogram. In order for a quadrilateral to be classified as a parallelogram, it must have both pairs of opposite sides parallel. The property of having congruent diagonals does not guarantee that the sides are parallel, so the quadrilateral may not be a parallelogram.
A quadrilateral is a parallelogram if one pair of opposite sides are equal and parallel Let ABCD be a quadrilateral in which ABCD and AB=CD, where means parallel to. Construct line AC and create triangles ABC and ADC. Now, in triangles ABC and ADC, AB=CD (given) AC = AC (common side) Angle BAC=Angle ACD (corresponding parts of corresponding triangles or CPCTC) Triangle ABC is congruent to triangle CDA by Side Angle Side Angle BCA =Angle DAC by CPCTC And since these are alternate angles, ADBC. Thus in the quadrilateral ABCD, ABCD and ADBC. We conclude ABCD is a parallelogram. var content_characters_counter = '1032';