a rectangle does not have four equal sides and its opposite sides are equal and has four right angles
Yes A parallelogram has opposite sides parallel and equal in length. Does a rectangle have opposite sides parallel and equal in length? Yes Thus a rectangle is a parallelogram.
A parallelogram, a rhombus, a square and a rectangle
Quadrilaterals that have parallel opposite sides (assuming that each side is parallel to its opposite): A parallelogram A rectangle A square (really a rectangle with all sides equal in length)
A square is rectangle with all its sides are equal in length. The rectangle has: (a) opposites sides are parallel. (b) opposite angles are equal
It is a square or a rectangle
A rectangle is a parallellogram with one right angle; A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with opposite sides equal and parallel.
The shape can only be a rectangle! A rectangle is a four-sided 2-dimentional figure, where every angle is a right angle, opposite sides are parallel, but the 4 sides are NOT equal.
A rectangle
Yes A parallelogram has opposite sides parallel and equal in length. Does a rectangle have opposite sides parallel and equal in length? Yes Thus a rectangle is a parallelogram.
Each angle of a rectangle is equal to the angle opposite.
rhombus
This is a rectangle, or the special case of the square (all sides equal).
you can prove any one of these statements to prove that quadrilateral is a rectangle: -- Opposite sides are parallel and any one angle is a right angle. -- Opposite sides are equal and any one angle is a right angle. -- All four angles are right angles. -- Adjacent angles are complementary, and one of them is a right angle. -- Opposite sides are either equal or parallel, and area is equal to the product of two adjacent sides. -- Diagonals are equal.
that is a rectangle
Rectangle, possibly a square if the adjacent sides are also equal.
A parallelogram, a rhombus, a square and a rectangle
A rectangle is defined as "a parallelogram with one right angle" A parallelogram is defined as "a quadrilateral with opposite sides equal and parallel" This makes a rectangle a sort of second-generation quadrilateral!