Yes it can have more than two pairs of lines just look at a hexagon
Any polygon with more than 3 sides can have two pairs of parallel sides.If it has only four sides and they make two parallel pairs, then it's a parallelogram.
A parallelogram always has. (That includes all squares, rectangles, and rhombera.)Also, any polygon with more than four sides can have them, but doesn't have to.
No. They cannot be similar because a parallelogram has two pairs of sides with equal length. A parallelogram cannot have more than one pair.
They are simply four pairs of perpendicular lines. There is nothing in the question to suggest there is anything more than that to them.
A parallelogram has fewer than four lines of symmetry when it is not a rectangle or a square. Specifically, a general parallelogram, like a rhomboid, has only two lines of symmetry, which are the diagonals. In contrast, rectangles and squares have additional lines of symmetry, resulting in four lines for squares and two for rectangles. Thus, any non-rectangular parallelogram will have fewer than four lines of symmetry.
Any polygon with more than 3 sides can have two pairs of parallel sides.If it has only four sides and they make two parallel pairs, then it's a parallelogram.
A parallelogram always has. (That includes all squares, rectangles, and rhombera.)Also, any polygon with more than four sides can have them, but doesn't have to.
No. They cannot be similar because a parallelogram has two pairs of sides with equal length. A parallelogram cannot have more than one pair.
An equilateral hexagon would work. It has more than 2 pairs of parallel sides though. There is no shape with only 2 pairs of parallel sides besides a parallelogram.
They are simply four pairs of perpendicular lines. There is nothing in the question to suggest there is anything more than that to them.
2It has one pair more because a parallelogram has two pairs of parallel sides whereas a trapezoid only has one pair of opposite parallel sides of different lengths.
A parallelogram has fewer than four lines of symmetry when it is not a rectangle or a square. Specifically, a general parallelogram, like a rhomboid, has only two lines of symmetry, which are the diagonals. In contrast, rectangles and squares have additional lines of symmetry, resulting in four lines for squares and two for rectangles. Thus, any non-rectangular parallelogram will have fewer than four lines of symmetry.
pallelogram is more of aa slanted figure than a rectangle. a squre is more of lines that are equel and a rectangle and pallellagram have diffrent lines
Yes, because you can draw a square on a page and fold it diagonally, sideways and downwards. A parallelogram can only fold on to itself once.
Of course not. Rectangle = 2 pairs of paralell lines, both lines in pairs being same exact length... Example: 2x2x4x4 no if it did have more than 4 sides it would be another shape entirely
A trapezoid is also called a parallelogram when it has two pairs of parallel sides. In general, a trapezoid has only one pair of parallel sides, while a parallelogram has both pairs of opposite sides parallel. Therefore, if a trapezoid meets the criteria for a parallelogram, it is specifically referred to as a parallelogram rather than a trapezoid.
The intersecting lines of a rectangle are at ninety degrees while the intersecting lines that form a parallelogram may be greater than or less than ninety degrees.