yes.
It could be an irregular polygon with 5 or more sides or a rectangle or square.
A quadrilateral with 4 right angles cannot have just two congruent sides so, unless this is a trick question (2 congruent sides does not excluded the possibility of more than 2 congruent sides), the answer is there is no such plane figure.
There is no shape with exactly 4 right angles and 2 congruent sides.A rectangle has 4 right angles and 2 pairs of congruent sides - 4 sides in all. But if the numbers in the question are not limiting, then there are many more shapes. An irregular hexagon with the following shape, will meet the requirements if its height is the same as its base.___|....\|......\___!_______|There are lots more shapes with more sides.
Two angles are said to be "congruent" if they are equal. To be more precise, their angle measurement is the same.
yes.
It could be an irregular polygon with 5 or more sides or a rectangle or square.
Rhombus, or is all the angles are right angles and you want to be more specific, squares.
A quadrilateral with 4 right angles cannot have just two congruent sides so, unless this is a trick question (2 congruent sides does not excluded the possibility of more than 2 congruent sides), the answer is there is no such plane figure.
There is no shape with exactly 4 right angles and 2 congruent sides.A rectangle has 4 right angles and 2 pairs of congruent sides - 4 sides in all. But if the numbers in the question are not limiting, then there are many more shapes. An irregular hexagon with the following shape, will meet the requirements if its height is the same as its base.___|....\|......\___!_______|There are lots more shapes with more sides.
Two angles are said to be "congruent" if they are equal. To be more precise, their angle measurement is the same.
If the lines are perpendicular, which is to say, intersect at right angles, then all four angles are congruent, since they will all be 90o. If the intersection is not perpendicular, then there are two sets of congruent angles. Opposite angles will be equal. That is to say, if you imagine the angles forming at more or less the cardinal points of the compass, the north and south angles will be equal, and the east and west angles will be equal.
A rhombus is a quadrilateral whose four sides are congruent. Squares are a type of rhombus with congruent angles. Since there are 4 contruent angles, they must all be right angles.So any quadrilateral that is equilateral is a rhombus and any rhombus with 4 right angles is a square. Every rhombus is a parallelogram because the opposite angles of a rhombus are congruent. Also, the diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular.
Two or more angles that have the same measure are called congruent angles.
Isosceles, scalene, equlateral, right, obtuse, acute, and I think more... Isosceles=2 congruent angles+sides, but not the third. Scalene=No congruent angle nor side. equilateral=All sides and angles are congruent. right=Has one right angle. obtuse= has 1 obtuse angle. acute= all angles are acute. Obtuse:More than 90 degree. Acute:Less than 90 degree. Right:90 degree.
They are said to be congruent
A square always has, and any polygon with more than four sides can have.