The picture you are looking for is a parallelogram.
A B . . D C . . Parallelogram ABCD.
A rectangle has 4 equal, 90 degree angles (one at each corner). A parallelogram may not have all equal angles. Imagine a rectangle that whose opposite corners were pulled so that it had two slanted, but parallel sides, and two straight and parallel sides. That is what some parallelograms look like. A rectangle, however, is a type of parallelogram. You can see a picture of a non-rectangular parallelogram, by clicking on the related link.
No, a parallelogram is not a trapezoid.
Well, think for a moment. (You can do it !) Try and picture a kite, a parallelogram, a trapezoid, and a rhombus. They're all quadrilaterals, but none of them is a rectangle.
A parallelogram is any shape with two pairs of parallel sides and 4 sides in total. For a picture of a typical parallelogram, see the related links section below.
I'm pretty sure you can see the difference, but a parallelogram has four parallel sides, and a trapezoid has none. Search up a picture of both on Google Images, and you'll be able to see.
Draw a parallelogram. (See the link for a picture.)
I dont know how to draw it on here but one parallelogram is a square
The picture you are looking for is a parallelogram.
There are many:prismpentangleparabolapentagramparallelepipedparallelogrampentadecagonplanepolygonpyramid
A B . . D C . . Parallelogram ABCD.
"What do you see IN the picture" is correct. "In" is used to refer to something contained within an object, like details or objects found in the picture. "On" is used to refer to something that is physically on top of the object.
A railway track is a perfect example of a real life parallelogram.
can I see a picture of mall
A rectangle has 4 equal, 90 degree angles (one at each corner). A parallelogram may not have all equal angles. Imagine a rectangle that whose opposite corners were pulled so that it had two slanted, but parallel sides, and two straight and parallel sides. That is what some parallelograms look like. A rectangle, however, is a type of parallelogram. You can see a picture of a non-rectangular parallelogram, by clicking on the related link.
No, I can't see any picture.