It is possible, but parallelograms do not. Some quadrilaterals do.
no its false
It can, but usually doesn't.
Yes, be it a common convex quadrilateral or a concave quadrilateral. For a convex quadrilateral, the most obvious example is a irregular trapezium, where the upper base and the lower base are of different length, and the slanted sides are of different length. It is similar for a concave quadrilateral.
There are only 4 possible numbers which could be measures of the angles for the quadrilateral. Each of the infinitely many other measures, such as 36.57 degrees, could NOT be the measure.
a quadrilateral is any shape with 4 sides, the sides could be any length a rectangle, square and any other figure with four sideds is a quadrilateral
The sum of the exterior angles of a polygon equals 360.Quadrilateral has 4 exterior angles.360/4=90 for a regular quadrilateral.
A rhombus is a 4 equal sided quadrilateral with equal opposite acute angles and equal opposite obtuse angles with diagonals that bisect each other at right angles.
Each of the four interior angles of a square (i.e. a regular quadrilateral) measures 90 degrees
That will depend on what type of 4 sided quadrilateral it is but its 4 interior angles add up to 360 degrees.
Measure each of the 4 angles with a protractor and they should total 360 degrees.
It is no different from a quadrilateral.A quadrilateral is any shape with four sides and a rhombus has four sides, therefore it is a quadrilateral.
No because the 4 interior angles of a quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees