It would be an irregular polygon that has not congruent sides and angles
No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.
This is a parallelogram. The first requirement is 2 pairs of congruent sides where the congruent sides are not adjacent. This is like a rectangle (excluding a square) that has two pairs of congruent sides where the congruent sides are not adjacent. But the angles are not all congruent (as set in the question) which pushes the shape into the "next less regular" shape, the parallelogram. The angles will not all be congruent, but it will have 2 pairs of congruent angles. There is no way to avoid the 2 pairs of congruent angles because of the requirement that the shape must have 2 pairs of congruent sides (the first requirement).
A regular polygon
A rhombus.
Corresponding sides and angles are not all congruent.
In all parallelograms, opposite angles and opposite sides are congruent. If all four sides are congruent, it's a rhombus. If all four angles are congruent, it's a rectangle. If all four sides and all four angles are congruent, it's a square.
It would be an irregular polygon that has not congruent sides and angles
In an isosceles triangle 2 sides are congruent and 2 angles are congruent. In an equilateral triangle all 3 sides are congruent and all 3 angles are congruent also.
All three sides are congruent (equal in length); all three angles are congruent (same measure).All three sides are congruent (equal in length); all three angles are congruent (same measure).All three sides are congruent (equal in length); all three angles are congruent (same measure).All three sides are congruent (equal in length); all three angles are congruent (same measure).
A rhombus.
No, none of the sides or angles are congruent in a scalene triangle. All three sides (and all three angles) are congruent only in an equilateral triangle.
Is a rhombus.
No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.No. In a regular polygon, all sides are congruent, and all angles are congruent. A parallelogram doesn't satisfy either of these conditions.
RectangleA rectangle has 4 congruent angles, but two pairs of congruent sides instead of all sides being congruent.
All sides congruent = square Two pairs of mutually congruent sides = rectangle
A square is the parallelogram that has all sides congruent. A square also has four angles that are all right angles.