Not necessarily. The two sides of equal length could be adjacent sides.
If the two sides which are not parallel have equal lengths, then the trapezoid is called an isosceles trapezoid (standard trapezoid has unequal sides). The base angles in an isosceles trapezoid are equal in measurement, also I know that a trapezoid with two nonparallel sides the same length is called an isosceles trapezoid.
It is a trapezoid in which the non-parallel sides are of the same length and subtend equal angles with the base. It can be viewed as an isosceles triangle whose apex has been removed by a line parallel to its base.
It's a trapezoid with two sides equal.
Yes, an isosceles trapezoid has one pair of oppsite sides parallel and the pair of sides that are not parallel are equal.
Draw two parallel lines of unequal length, and connect their end points. If you have a right angle, it is a right trapezoid. If the non-parallel sides are equal in length, it is an isosceles trapezoid.
If the two sides which are not parallel have equal lengths, then the trapezoid is called an isosceles trapezoid (standard trapezoid has unequal sides). The base angles in an isosceles trapezoid are equal in measurement, also I know that a trapezoid with two nonparallel sides the same length is called an isosceles trapezoid.
Called an Isosceles trapezoid when the sides that aren't parallel are equal in length.
No but the diagonals are equal in length
An Isosceles trapezoid has four sides (is a quadrilateral) with a pair of parallel sides and the other two sides of equal length; whereas An isosceles triangle has three sides with a pair of sides of the same length and the other side a different length.
No its parallel bases can never be equal in length. But if it is in the form of an isosceles trapezoid then its slanted sides are equal in length.
A trapezoid can also be a parallelogram if its non-parallel sides are of equal length.
Base angles are equal and non-parallel sides are equal in length.
A trapezoid has no equal sides providing that it is not an isosceles trapezoid.
The description given fits that of an isosceles trapezoid whereas non parallel sides are equal in length and base angles are equal in sizes.
A trapezoid with even legs is a geometric shape where both of the non-parallel sides (or legs) are of equal length. The parallel sides, on the other hand, are not necessarily equal in length.
No. All trapezoids have only one pair of parallel sides which are different in length. In an isosceles trapezoid the lengths of the two non-parallel sides are equal.
If you are talking about the triangle:An isosceles triangle has two sides of equal length. Sometimes it is specified as having two and only two sides of equal length, and sometimes as having at least two sides of equal length.If you are talking about the trapezoid (or trapezium):In Euclidean geometry, an isosceles trapezoid is a convex quadrilateral with the line of symmetry bisecting one pair of opposite sides.