By A Mystery Man Writer
All squares are rectangles. Not all rectangles are squares. A quadrilateral is a rectangle if all four internal angles are 90^@. A quadrilateral is a square if all four internal angles are 90^@ and all four sides are equal in measure. Note that the first condition for a square is the same as the only condition for a rectangle, and thus all squares are rectangles. However, there is no condition which requires a rectangle to have four equal sides, and thus not all rectangles are squares. For example: The above is a rectangle, as all four angles are 90^@, but is not a square, as the two vertical sides are shorter than the two horizontal sides.
Area of a Rectangle, Area of Rectangle = Length × Breadth
Difference Between Square and Rectangle - physicscatalyst's Blog
Area and Perimeter of Rectangles and Squares (Video)
The number of lines of symmetry in a rectangle and a square are ----- (equal/ unequal)
Is a Square a Rectangle? Yes or No? — Mashup Math
Special Parallelograms: Rhombus, Square & Rectangle - Properties
Area of a Rectangle, Area of Rectangle = Length × Breadth
Lesson Explainer: Areas of Rectangles and Squares
Is a Square a Rectangle? Yes or No? — Mashup Math