Not really. In "American" English a trapezium is a quadrilateral with no sides parallel. In "British" English a trapezium is a quadrilateral with two sides parallel. --- however --- You need to compare these usages with trapezoid.... which sees the definitions almost reversed. In "American" English a trapezoid is a quadrilateral with only one pair of parallel lines. In "British" English a trapezoid is a quadrilateral with no sides parallel. -- Note -- A British "trapezium" could arguably include a square.
A trapezium is a rectangle with its top line shorter then the bottom one.
A trapezium. A trapezium. A trapezium. A trapezium.
A quadrilateral, or four-sided plane figure with 1 pair of parallel lines
Not all trapezium are Isosceles.
A trapezium or a kite.A trapezium or a kite.A trapezium or a kite.A trapezium or a kite.
It is approximately a trapezium - that is why it is called a trapezium muscle!
A right trapezium. A right trapezium. A right trapezium. A right trapezium.
A trapezium is a quadrilateral (a four sided figure) where no two sides are parallel.This is the American English usage. The British English usage would be to call this an irregular quadrilateral. Previously, it was called a trapezoid, but that has a different meaning today.
type 'shape of a trapezium' in Google then you get the shape of trapezium , quadrilateral , rhombus , ect...
A trapezium. a rhombus, a parallelogram.A trapezium. a rhombus, a parallelogram.A trapezium. a rhombus, a parallelogram.A trapezium. a rhombus, a parallelogram.
Isosceles trapezium
an iscoceles trapezium is concyclic