Yes. (Ex. a trapezoid)
A quadrilateral with 2 pairs of parallel line segments is a parallelogram. Parallelograms include rectangles, rhombuses, and squares.
To create a quadrilateral with a horizontal line of symmetry but not a vertical line of symmetry, start by drawing a horizontal line that will serve as the axis of symmetry. Then, construct two identical shapes or segments above this line, ensuring they mirror each other. For the bottom portion, make the segments different in shape or size, ensuring that they do not mirror each other vertically. This way, the quadrilateral will have horizontal symmetry while lacking vertical symmetry.
whats a quadrilateral with 2 sides not parallel and 2 sides parallel
No, a circle can't be a parallelogram. A circle is a curve. A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides constructed with four line segments. The line segments are straight, and the circle is a continuous curve.
No but it does have parallel line segments of different lengths and 1 line of symmetry
A quadrilateral with 2 pairs of parallel line segments is a parallelogram. Parallelograms include rectangles, rhombuses, and squares.
To create a quadrilateral with a horizontal line of symmetry but not a vertical line of symmetry, start by drawing a horizontal line that will serve as the axis of symmetry. Then, construct two identical shapes or segments above this line, ensuring they mirror each other. For the bottom portion, make the segments different in shape or size, ensuring that they do not mirror each other vertically. This way, the quadrilateral will have horizontal symmetry while lacking vertical symmetry.
No
whats a quadrilateral with 2 sides not parallel and 2 sides parallel
US DefinitionA trapezoid is a closed plane figure consisting of four line segments/sides; two of these line segments are parallel (but not equal in length) and two are nonparallel.(in the UK, this is called a trapezium)British DefinitionA trapezoid is a closed plane figure consisting of four line segments/sides; NONE of these line segments are parallel to any of the other line segments of the quadrilateral.(in the US this is just a quadrilateral)*(see the related links for images of trapezoids)
A parallelogram is a quadrilateral in which each of two sets of opposite sides consists of two parallel lines (or for math purists I should say, parallel line segments).
No, a circle can't be a parallelogram. A circle is a curve. A parallelogram is a quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides constructed with four line segments. The line segments are straight, and the circle is a continuous curve.
No but it does have parallel line segments of different lengths and 1 line of symmetry
A quadrilateral has 4 line segments
A quadrilateral.
It forms a parallelogram.
There are 4