Yes, because the opposite sides and angles are congruent.
Latitude and longitude are angles, and are best expressed in units of angle measurement. Those could include radians, grads, etc., but the most commonly used are degrees, minutes, seconds, and fractions of seconds.
Triangles do not necessarily have right angles, but they can. A triangle with a right angle is called a right triangle. A triangle cannot have more than one right angle, since the total of all three angles of every triangle equals 180°.
A double quote (") can mean:seconds when measuring angles, eg 52° 5' 10" is 52 degrees, 5 minutes, 10 seconds (of arc); there are 60 minutes (of arc) in 1 degree and 60 seconds (of arc) in 1 minute (of arc)inches when measuring lengths, eg 1 yard = 36" is 1 yards is 36 inches.
Yes, vertical angles do have the same measures.
a crack
No.
The lengths of the 4 sides of a rhombus are equal but a rhombus has no right angles
You don't. There is not enough information. Different rhombuses with the same side lengths can have different areas, depending on the angles.
That will depend on the lengths of the diagonals of the rhombus which are of different lengths and intersect each other at right angles but knowing the lengths of the diagonals of the rhombus it is then possible to work out its perimeter and area.
The perimeter of a rhombus does not provide enough information to determine angles.
A rhombus has 4 equal sides but no right angles
Depending upon the lengths of the sides it can be an irregular quadrilateral, a rhombus, a parallelogram or a kite.
You need more information: the length of a side. Then, since the diagonals bisect one another at right angles, you can use Pythagoras's theorem to calculate their lengths.
Not necessarily; it is a parallelogram - a rectangle is a parallelogram in which all angles are 90o. It could also be a rhombus - a rhombus is a parallelogram with all lengths the same; a square is a rhombus in which all angles are 90o.
Equilateral? * * * * * No. Equilateral means only that the sides have equal lengths - not that the angles are also equal. A rhombus, for example is equilateral but not equiangular. The correct answer is "regular".
In a rhombus, all sides are of equal length, and the diagonals bisect each other at right angles. To determine the measure of side 2 in rhombus HOME, you would need additional information, such as the lengths of the diagonals or the length of another side. If you have that information, you can then calculate or identify the length of side 2 accordingly.
A square and a rhombus both have equal side lengths, however a square has four 90 degree angles. A rhombus can have differing angles. They don't have to be all 90.They both have four sides and all four sides are the same size. While all four corners of a square are right angles, this does not have to be true for a rhombus.