http://www.ck12.org Chapter 6. Polygons and Quadrilaterals
- Remove the ruler and mark a 50◦angle, at the left end of the bottom line drawn in Step 1. Draw the other side
of the angle and make sure it intersects the top line. Measure the length of this side. - The measure of the diagonal (red) side should be about 1.3 inches (if your ruler is 1 inch wide). Mark this
length on the bottom line and the top line from the point of intersection with the 50◦angle. Draw in the fourth
side. It will connect the two endpoints of these lengths. - By the way we drew this parallelogram; it is a rhombus because all four sides are 1.3 inches long. Draw in the
diagonals.
Measuretheanglescreatedbythediagonals: the angles at their point of intersection and the angles created by the
sides and each diagonal. You should find the measure of 12 angles total. What do you discover?
Theorem 6-15:A parallelogram is a rhombus if and only if the diagonals are perpendicular.
Theorem 6-16:A parallelogram is a rhombus if and only if the diagonals bisect each angle.
There are no theorems about the diagonals of a square. We know that a square is a rhombus and a rectangle. So, the
diagonals of a square have the properties of a rhombus and a rectangle.
Example 3:List everything you know about the squareSQRE.
Solution:A square has all the properties of a parallelogram, rectangle and rhombus.