A kite, if the topmost angle is right and none of the others are.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the geometry questions, huh? So, like, a shape that fits that description would be a triangular prism, because it has perpendicular edges but none that are parallel. It's like the rebel of the 3D shapes, just doing its own thing.
a right triangle, a pentagon w/ a right angle, alot of shapes with right angles.
Some do, some don't.
A trapezoid is defined as a four-sided figure (quadrilateral) with at least one pair of parallel sides. The other pair of sides can be either parallel or non-parallel, and they are not necessarily perpendicular. In some cases, a trapezoid may have perpendicular sides, but this is not a requirement for its classification.
Railroad tracks or the number 11 are parallel lines. A cross or a small t are perpendicular lines. Also the two ll's in the middle of parallel are parallel lines.
all right some body said that Ellipse Circle Oval but parallel shapes need to have lines so they are not parallel shapes so all i know that are not parallel is a diamond and a rhombus
no, there are only two faces and one is curved therefore cannot be parallel in order for the cone to eventually come to a point, there cannot be any perpendicular faces
A polygon need not have ANY perpendicular or parallel lines. For example, consider an equilateral triangle. It can happen that two sides of a polygon, extended if necessary, meet at a point where they form a 90 degree angle. Those two lines are perpendicular. There may be pairs of lines such that, no matter how far you extend them in either direction, they will never meet. Such lines are parallel. A triangle cannot have parallel lines but it can have perpendicular lines. Any polygon of 4 or more sides can have sides that are perpendicular or parallel (or some of each).
Neither: because one line, by itself, can be neither parallel or perpendicular. These characteristics are relevant only in the context of another line (or lines). The given line is parallel to some lines and perpendicular to others.
Squares, parallelograms, rectangles, and rhombus are some. Zaragotha (Zara)
Some examples are a square, rectangle, that is all I know so far
Some examples for parallel lines- railroad tracks, steps, buildings, paper, windows, ect. Some examples for perpendicular lines- stop sign, bridge, street intersection, driveway into a street, ect.