by kicking
No, one example is a kite that DOES NOT have two right angles. It is not a cyclic quadrilateral. A kite that does have two right angles is one.
you might get a kite if the triangles are the same then you might get a rectangle
No, a kite is not convex. A kite is a quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent sides of equal length and one pair of opposite angles that are equal.
A kite can be any shape.A kite can fly.Benjamin Franklin flew a kite into a lightning storm and got a big shock to prove that electricity was an energy.kites have two lines of symmetryps hope this helps!some one answer this
In a kite, two pairs of opposite angles are formed, with one pair being congruent and the other being unequal. For two angles in a kite to be opposite and complementary, they would need to add up to 90 degrees. However, in a kite, the opposite angles do not satisfy this condition; thus, two opposite angles in a kite cannot be complementary.
acute
the kite that fly in the air came first but the geometric one is a kite is a quadrilateral with two pairs of congruent adjacent sides and no opposite sides congruent.
The quadrilateral you are referring to is called a kite. A kite is a quadrilateral with two distinct pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length, and one pair of diagonals that are not equal in length. Additionally, a kite has two axes of symmetry, which are lines that divide the kite into two congruent halves.
The shape that fits this description is a kite. A kite has two pairs of equal sides, with one pair longer than the other. It also has one line of symmetry, which divides the kite into two equal halves. Additionally, a kite has one pair of equal angles, formed by the intersection of the longer sides.
In a kite, the two pairs of adjacent angles are equal, and one pair of opposite angles is formed by the intersection of the diagonals. Therefore, while two angles in a kite can be complementary (summing to 90 degrees), they cannot be opposite angles, as opposite angles in a kite are not generally equal and do not fit the definition of being complementary. Thus, two angles of a kite cannot be both opposite and complementary simultaneously.
A quadrilateral that has exactly one line of symmetry is called a kite. In a kite, one diagonal acts as the line of symmetry, dividing the shape into two congruent triangles. The other diagonal of the kite is not a line of symmetry, as the two resulting triangles are not congruent. Kites are a specific type of quadrilateral with unique properties related to their symmetry and angles.
Two equilateral triangles or one rhombus.