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Only if you limit yourself to quadrilaterals. But why? It is, of course, possible for a pentagon (or polygons with 6 or more sides) to have 4 equal sides and only 2 right angles.
Any polygon with 4 or more sides can have only two right angles.
There is no quadrilateral that meets these requirements. It is, of course, possible for a pentagon (or polygons with 6 or more sides) to have 4 equal sides and only 2 right angles.
A square because that is the only possible figure that can have two congruent sides and four right angles.
Yes, a trapezoid can have two right angles and two acute angles. Its only requirement is that it has two parallel sides.
a polygon with 5 sides and 2 right angles is a pentagon
Yes, it can can have two right angles. However, only 2 sides are parallel in a trapezium. One side of the two remaining sides can be perpendicular to the parallel sides, making it have two right angles.
Simi-Circle have 2 angles and 4 sides
A rectangle has 4 right angles and 2 pairs of parallel sides.
A Rhombus had 2 pairs of parallel sides and has NO right angles. :)
A right trapezium.
it has 4 equal sides and no right angles
A square has 4 right angles, and 2 pairs of equal, perpendicular sides.