The shape you are describing is a trapezoid. A trapezoid is a quadrilateral with at least one pair of parallel sides. It can have two right angles, but it does not have any lines of symmetry due to its asymmetrical nature.
It is a trapezoid and its other 2 angles are obtuse and acute
A rectangle. Obviously the right angles are in the four corners of the rectangle. The lines of symmetry occur across the horizontal and vertical. There are no lines of symmetry on the diagonal.
infinite.
rectangle
No because they are parallel.......that means that they never meet.
A shape that has 2 right angles, only 1 set of parallel sides, and no lines of symmetry is a right trapezoid (or right-angled trapezium). In this trapezoid, the two non-parallel sides are not equal in length, contributing to the lack of symmetry. The right angles are formed between one of the parallel sides and one of the non-parallel sides.
square and rectangles are technicality squares
Rectangle
Parallel refers to lines and not angles A right angle is formed by 2 lines that are perpendicular to each other and not parallel If you already have a line and you draw two lines which are at right angles to it, those two lines are parallel.
It is a trapezoid and its other 2 angles are obtuse and acute
The description given fits that of a trapezoid
A trapezoid (or trapezium in some countries) fits this description. It has two right angles, one pair of parallel sides, and lacks any lines of symmetry due to the unequal lengths of the non-parallel sides. This unique combination of features distinguishes it from other quadrilaterals.
A rectangle. Obviously the right angles are in the four corners of the rectangle. The lines of symmetry occur across the horizontal and vertical. There are no lines of symmetry on the diagonal.
A right angle has no parallel lines, but it does have perpendicular lines that meet at right angles.
a pentagon
infinite.
Yes.