What is the main difference between a square and a rhombus?

The square sides are straight but the rhombus is parallel

square: a quadrilateral with 4 equal sides, all angles 90Β°

rhombus: a quadrilateral with 4 equal sides.

A square is a rhombus, but a rhombus is not necessarily a square.
http://www.mathsisfun.com/quadrilaterals.html

Square is a rhombus but a rhombus isn’t always a square πŸ€“

Angles of square measure 360 degrees and rhombus don’t πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„πŸ„

the corners

a rhombus is like two wider triangles rather than the two smaller ones in a square

The main difference between a square and a rhombus lies in their defining properties. To understand this, let's first define what a square and a rhombus are:

1. Square: A square is a four-sided polygon with all sides equal in length and all angles equal to 90 degrees. So, a square is both equilateral (all sides are equal) and equiangular (all angles are equal).

2. Rhombus: A rhombus is also a four-sided polygon, but unlike the square, it does not have right angles. It has opposite sides that are parallel and equal in length, but its angles can have any value other than 90 degrees.

Based on these definitions, we can identify the main difference between a square and a rhombus:

The main difference is in their angles:
- A square has four right angles (90 degrees each).
- A rhombus can have any angle value for its four angles, as long as the opposite angles are congruent (equal) to each other.

To visually distinguish them, think of a square as a special type of rhombus where all the angles are right angles.