A paralellogram.
Yes
Not all quaderilaterals satisfy this statement. Those quaderil;aterals that satisfy 'two pairs of parallel sides' are , a square, a rectangle, and a rhombus. Those quaderilaterals that do NOT satify ' two pairs of parallel sides' are, a trapezium, a kite, and an irregular shaped quaderilateral.
Any rhombus has. That includes squares.
Any shape with four straight sides is a quadrilateral. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides, and a parallelogram has two pairs of parallel sides. So any shape with four straight sides and no parallel sides is a quadrilateral that is not a parallelogram or trapezoid.
All parallelograms are quadrilaterals. Not all quadrilaterals are parallelograms. A quadrilateral refers to any polygon with four sides. A parallelogram refers to any quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides.
quadrilateral--a four-sided figure, any length sides, any angles trapezoid--one pair of parallel sides, any length sides, any angles parallelogram--two pairs of parallel sides, opposite sides congruent, opposite angles congruent rectangle--two pairs of parallel sides, opposite sides congruent, all angles are right angles (90 degrees) rhombus--two pairs of parallel sides, all sides congruent, opposite angles congruent square--two pairs of parallel sides, all sides congruetn, all angles are right angles (90 degrees)
A quadrilateral is any figure with 4 sides. ("quad" = 4, "latus" = side). It doesn't have to have any parallel lines. If it happens to have two sides that are parallel, then it's a trapezoid. If it happens to have two pairs of parallel sides, then it's a parallelogram. Common parallelograms are rectangles, squares, and kites.
A parallelogram is a 4 sided quadrilateral and has 2 pairs of opposite parallel sides
We'd need to know the number of sides. An equilateral triangle won't have any parallel or perpendicular sides. An equilateral quadrilateral will have two pairs of parallel sides which may or may not be perpendicular.
A quadrilateral or a pentagon can have up to 2 pairs of parallel sides.A hexagon or heptagon can have up to 3 pairs of parallel sides.and so on.So, apart from a triangle, any polygon can have two sets of parallel sides.
Any quadrilateral other than a parallelogram (or its special cases). So it could be a trapezium, a kite, an arrowhead or a totally irregular quadrilateral.
Yes, it is possible to create a quadrilateral with 0 right angles and 0 pairs of opposite sides that are parallel. An example would be a kite-shaped quadrilateral where the sides are of different lengths and no angles are 90 degrees. Such a shape would not have any parallel sides, as all sides can be arranged to meet the criteria.