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yes
Yes. If you don't believe me, then you can draw one yourself.
Yes. A rhombus is a "squashed" square in that every side is equal in length but only opposite angles are equal. The square is a special case of a rhombus where not only are opposite angles equal, but all 4 angles are equal. All squares are rhombuses but not all rhombuses are squares.
a rhombus
a square
No, it is not possible.
No, you cannot.
Sure ! -- The sides of every rhombus are always congruent. -- If you make the angles congruent, then you have a special kind of rhombus called a "square".
yes
Yes. If you don't believe me, then you can draw one yourself.
Yes, but then it would become a square (a special case of a rhombus).
Yes. A rhombus is a "squashed" square in that every side is equal in length but only opposite angles are equal. The square is a special case of a rhombus where not only are opposite angles equal, but all 4 angles are equal. All squares are rhombuses but not all rhombuses are squares.
a rhombus
a square
Squares are special cases of rhombuses, ones in which all the internal angles are the same (90°). So no, you cannot draw a square that is not a rhombus. It's a bit like trying to draw a square that is not a quadrilateral. Squares are special cases of quadrilaterals.
Yes, draw a rhombus.
square, rectangle