A parallelogram is always a "pushed over square". However a square implies 4 angles of 90 degrees (and 4 sides of equal length); a parallelogram has no angles that are 90 degrees, so really a parallelogram is never a square (even if the sides are all equal length).
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Yet another horrendously incorrect answer by "The Community"!
A parallelogram is NOT a "pushed over square". All four sides of a square are the same length. This is NOT necessarily true of a parallelogram.
A parallelogram CAN have angles of 90 degrees and so a parallelogram CAN be a square.
A parallelogram is a square in the sense that they are both 4 sided quadrilaterals but they both have different geometrical properties
No, a parallelogram is not always a square, but a square is a parallelogram.
No, a parallelogram is not always a square, but a square is a parallelogram.
Square = parallelogram and a square trapezoid = trapezoid Parallelogram = Parallelogram
A square is always a parallelogram. Every square is a parallelogram.
No, a parallelogram is not necessarily square.However, by definition, a square is always a parallelogram.
No , parallelogram is not a type of square .
A square is both a quadrangle and a parallelogram.
A square is a parallelogram a parallelogram isn't always a square. The definition of parallelogram is a closed shape with two parallel sides. So a rectangle is a parallelogram and so is a square and a rombus. The definition of square is shape with four equal sides.
A square is a parallelogram, but not all parallelograms are squares.
No.But every square is a parallelogram.
Yes, a square is a special type of a parallelogram.
Although they have different properties a square and a parallelogram are both classed as 4 sided quadrilaterals.