Any rectangle that does not have all of its sides of equal length will be a non-square rectangle. A square is a special form of rectangle. In a rectangle, all its interior angles are right angles. If all four sides are the same length, it's a square. If not, it's a non-square rectangle.
Technically, a square is a rectangle with four lines of symmetry. A non-square rectangle has exactly two lines of symmetry: the vertical and the horizontal.
No, a non-square rectangle has two: the horizontal and the vertical. A square has four lines of symmetry: the horizontal, the vertical, and two diagonal lines.
a triangle. . .
Yes, they can. To demonstrate this draw a square on a sheet of paper. Draw a line diagonally from one corner to the one opposite. Cut along this line and you will have two triangles. Take them apart; if you put them together again in the right way you will have a square. Put together in different ways you can make an isosceles triangle or an equilateral parallelogram. If you do the same thing beginning with a rectangle, you will be able to reassemble the triangles to form a rectangle, isosceles triangle or a (non-equilateral) parallelogram.
Any rectangle that does not have all of its sides of equal length will be a non-square rectangle. A square is a special form of rectangle. In a rectangle, all its interior angles are right angles. If all four sides are the same length, it's a square. If not, it's a non-square rectangle.
Technically, a square is a rectangle with four lines of symmetry. A non-square rectangle has exactly two lines of symmetry: the vertical and the horizontal.
Properties of a non-square rectangle include the following: The diagonal cross each other and are congruent. Opposite sides are congruent as well as parallel.
No it's a poly polypus
A non-regular quadrilateral is one where all the sides are not the same length. Therefore any rectangle (that is not technically a square) is a non-regular quadrilateral.
No, a non-square rectangle has two: the horizontal and the vertical. A square has four lines of symmetry: the horizontal, the vertical, and two diagonal lines.
No. It's a squashed square ... with 4 equal sides but vertices that aren't "corners".
Rectangle is length times width and triangles are base times height divided by 2.
yes. A rectangle is any 4 sided 2 shape, while a square is a 4 sided shape with equal sides. A square is a rectangle, but a rectangle is not a square. * * * * * The above answer does not address the question that was asked. Technically, squares are a proper subset of rectangles. In that respect, any square is a rectangle as well and so the answer to the question is yes. However, if considering squares and non-square rectangles, the answer is no. The previous answer is not correct, however. A rectangle is NOT any 4 sided 2 shape. A rectangle must have four right angles and two pairs of equal opposite sides.
A rectangle is a quadrilateral with 4 right angles (90 degrees) and two sets of parallel lines. The definition of a rectangle includes the the shape of a square, but a square has an added rule, that all sides must be equal. So a square is a rectangle. Oblong is a term for non-square rectangles.
Well, hello there! A nonsquare rectangle is a rectangle where all the angles are right angles, but the sides are not equal in length. It's like having a special rectangle that's a little different from the usual, but just as wonderful in its own unique way. Remember, every shape has its own beauty and purpose on the canvas of life.
It never changed! The word 'oblong' still exists as a non-square rectangle. Unfortunately the way shapes tends to be taught to pupils is through drawings rather than looking closely at properties; the latter identifies the fact that a rectangle is simply a quadrilateral with 4 right-angles. This means a square is a rectangle with equal sides and an oblong is a rectangle with unequal sides.