A rhombus
A parallelogram with equal sides is a rhombus.
4 sides of equal length.
No, the sides of a parallelogram do not have to be the same length. A parallelogram is defined by having opposite sides that are equal in length and parallel, but adjacent sides can be of different lengths. Therefore, while the opposite sides are equal, a parallelogram can have varying lengths for its adjacent sides.
A "parallelogram" technically is a shape where opposite sides are equal and any shape with four sides is a "quadrilateral". Every square has four sides of equal length, so a square is both a parallelogram and a quadrilateral. A rhombus(or diamond shape) can have four sides of equal length and can be a parallelogram as well, so either are possibilities.
No. By the very definition of a parallelogram, it's opposite sides of are equal length.
It could be either of the following: * Rhombus - A parallelogram with four sides of equal length. * Square - A parallelogram with four sides of equal length and four angles of equal size (right angles).
Yes, a parallelogram can have sides of the same length, in which case it is specifically referred to as a rhombus. In a rhombus, all four sides are equal in length, while still maintaining the properties of a parallelogram, such as opposite sides being parallel and equal in length. Thus, while all rhombuses are parallelograms, not all parallelograms have sides of equal length.
A rhombus has 4 sides of equal length.
All four sides of a rhombus are the same length. A parallelogram has two pairs of equal length. This is analogous to the difference between a square and a rectangle.
4 sides of equal length.
rhombus
Technically it is because a rhombus is a parallelogram that has four sides of equal length in the same way that a square is technically a rectangle that has four sides of equal length.