rhombus

listen to the pronunciation of rhombus
Englisch - Türkisch
(isim) eşkenar dörtgen
(Matematik) eşkıyılı dörtgen
eşkenar dörtgen

Bir kare hem dikdörtgen hem de eşkenar dörtgendir. - A square is both a rectangle and a rhombus.

Dikdörtgen ve eşkenar dörtgen, paralelkenardırlar. - The rectangle and the rhombus are parallelograms.

{ç} --es (ram'bısız)/rhom.bi (ram'bay) i., (Geometri) eşkenar dörtgen
Englisch - Englisch
A parallelogram having all sides of equal length
a parallelogram with four equal sides; an oblique-angled equilateral parallelogram
A quadrilateral is a rhombus if and only if all the sides are congruent
A Geometrical Shape of 4 Equal Edges & 2 Pairs of Angles
Same as Rhomb, 1
Plane figure with four straight sides of equal length; a parallelogram with equal sides
A quadrilateral with four equal sides A square is a rhombus See figure
A parallelogram with four congruent sides (cfParallelograms Discussion)
{i} equilateral parallelogram with oblique angles
An equilateral parallelogram (Lesson 2 7)
- Equilateral parallelogram
n (Gr rhombos, object that can be turned) an outline like a rhomboid, a parallelogram with equal sides, having two oblique angles and two acute angles
A six-sided prism with three rhombuses at each end (rhomb - A plane figure having four equal sides and the opposite angles equal, two being acute and two obtuse)
A parallelogram with four equal sides, sides are all the same length
A quadrilateral with four congruent sides
- a quadrilateral with four equal sides and no right angles
– Quadrilateral in which all four sides are of equal length, but opposite angles are equal
a quadrilateral with equal sides
A rhombus is a geometric shape which has four equal sides but is not a square. a shape with four equal straight sides, especially one that is not a square (rhombos)
An equilateral parallelogram with oblique angles
A rhombus
lozenge
rhombi
plural of rhombus
rhombuses
plural of rhombus
rhombus

    Silbentrennung

    rhom·bus

    Synonyme

    diamond, lozenge, rhomb

    Aussprache

    Etymologie

    [ 'räm-b&s ] (noun.) circa 1567. First coined 1567, from Late Latin rhombus Ancient Greek ῥόμβος (rhombos, “rhombus, spinning top”) ῥέμβω (rhembo, “I turn around”).
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