All four sides of a rhombus must be congruent. In order for it to have four equal sides, it must have two!
An isosceles trapezoid must have a pair of parallel sides and a pair of congruent sides
Yes, all trapezoids must have one pair of congruent sides.
By definition, a trapezoid only must have exactly one pair of parallel sides. An isosceles trapezoid does have one pair of congruent sides, but not all trapezoids will have exactly one pair of congruent sides.
Yes. To be a trapezoid, a quadrilateral must have one pair of sides that are parallel. Since rhombuses are parallelograms, they are all also trapezoids, so a subset of trapezoids are rhombuses.
Rhombus.
This quadrilateral is a trapezoid. In a trapezoid, one pair of opposite sides is parallel, and one pair of opposite sides is congruent. The other two sides are not parallel or congruent.
An isosceles trapezoid has a pair of parallel bases and a pair of congruent sides
Yes, an isosceles trapezoid has one pair of congruent opposite sides and congruent base angles
An isosceles trapezoid only has 1 pair of congruent sides. It is drawn like this:
In any triangle that is not equilateral, there will always be a pair of non-congruent sides. This is because, in a triangle, the lengths of the sides are determined by the angles opposite them; if one angle is different from the others, the sides opposite those angles must also be different in length. Hence, in scalene and isosceles triangles (where at least two sides are equal), there will always be at least one pair of sides that are not congruent.
Because it does't have 4 equal sides and 4 equal angles as for example such as a square.
A trapezoid is defined as a quadrilateral with at least one pair of parallel sides. While it typically does not have a requirement for congruent sides, some specific types of trapezoids, such as isosceles trapezoids, do have one pair of congruent non-parallel sides. Therefore, a trapezoid may have one pair of congruent sides, but it is not a defining characteristic of all trapezoids.