It is a rectangle with sides of 2 by 3
If A is at (5, 2) and B is at (5, 2) then they are both the same point; and if C is at (0, 2) and D is at (0, 2) then they are both the same point; and the quadrilateral is a [straight] line.
Yes, be it a common convex quadrilateral or a concave quadrilateral. For a convex quadrilateral, the most obvious example is a irregular trapezium, where the upper base and the lower base are of different length, and the slanted sides are of different length. It is similar for a concave quadrilateral.
stopwatch
6.345 2.41 5 12,000
1: 1,200.001 2: 1,580.9 3: 1,580 4: 1,500 APEX
A rectangle.
It appears to be a parallelogram
Rectangle
It appears to be an isosceles trapezoid when plotted on the Cartesian plane
The given points when plotted on the coordinated grid is a rectangle
rectangle
From the given coordinates it would form a line segment whose end points are (5, 2) and (0, 2) and so there is no 4 sided quadrilateral.
If A is at (5, 2) and B is at (5, 2) then they are both the same point; and if C is at (0, 2) and D is at (0, 2) then they are both the same point; and the quadrilateral is a [straight] line.
square
A quadrilateral can be named in several ways based on its properties. The most common naming conventions include using the number of sides (four) or specific types of quadrilaterals, such as trapezoids, parallelograms, rectangles, and squares. Additionally, quadrilaterals can be referred to by their vertices, for example, quadrilateral ABCD. In summary, the naming variations depend on both geometric classification and vertex labeling, offering numerous possibilities.
It's not. It's most often called a square but technically speaking it's an equilateral quadrilateral.
All quadrilaterals have four sides, four vertices and four angles. A quadrilateral where all sides have the same length can also be called a square, a rhombus, a rectangle, and a parallelogram. * * * * * If all 4 sides are equal it is a square or a rhombus but not a rectangle or parallelogram.