It isn't. "Kiting a cheque" is slang for writing a bad cheque when there is no money in your account. A kite is made of paper and has nothing between it and the ground - a bad cheque is paper and has no money behind it - you can see the similarities that made people start using the term "kite" to mean "writing a bad cheque."
The kite soared by me like a jet on a runway The kite flew by me as graceful as an Eagle!
A kite string is a string which connects a kite to the person flying it. The string not only prevents the kite from flying away but actually keeps it flying by assuring that it does not turn from the wind.
No. Kite is a long I word. The E is silent.
a quadrilateral in which diagonal are not congruent and larger diagonal is perpendicular bisector of smaller diagonal then it is known as kite -- M.S. Vighe
The word "sunrise" has the long I as in kite.
Kite in Hindi is Pathang.
The end of a kite is called the tail.
...because there are no funds supporting the check...it is only supported by AIR, like a kite.
In Sanskrit, kite is called "patanga" or "chitrakarika."
No, not every rhombus will be a kite. The opposite is also true that not every kite will be a rhombus.
In Ilokano, a language spoken in the Philippines, a kite is called "pandikdik."
A chick.
It is a kind of hexahedron, and I am not sure there is a specific name for kite shapes.
No. A kite is also a quadrilateral, but every quadrilateral may not be a kite. You could call a kite a quadrilateral also, but not vice versa.
COMETA!!! ;)
kite
Some kite strings are conductive if they are made of materials that conduct electricity, such as metal-coated strings. However, most typical kite strings made of paper or fabric are not conductive. It's important to check the materials used in the kite string to determine if it is conductive.