Yes a parallelogram has parallel sides
It's a shape with Parellel lines
Yes, if it is an equiangular or equiangular and equilateral parallelogram (rectangle or square).
Not sure about "parellel" but a quadrangle with two pairs of parallel lines MUST be a parallelogram.
Parallelogram. You could also call it a rhombus if all sides are the same length, but a rhombus is technically a parallelogram.
a parallelogram, a rhombus, a rectangle, and a square.
It's a shape with Parellel lines
Yes, if it is an equiangular or equiangular and equilateral parallelogram (rectangle or square).
A parallelogram.
Not sure about "parellel" but a quadrangle with two pairs of parallel lines MUST be a parallelogram.
Rectangle, Square, Parallelogram
A square, a rectangle, a rhombus, or a parallelogram.
parallelogram. also squares. which are parallelograms
Parallelogram. You could also call it a rhombus if all sides are the same length, but a rhombus is technically a parallelogram.
a parallelogram, a rhombus, a rectangle, and a square.
A rhombus and a parallelogram but not a rectangle or a square
The quadrilateral you are describing is a parallelogram. In a parallelogram, opposite sides are parallel and equal in length, but it does not necessarily have right angles; the angles can be acute or obtuse. Examples of such parallelograms include rhombuses and non-right-angled rectangles.
This would be a parallelogram or a rhombus. A parallelogram is like a pushed over rectangle and a rhombus a pushed over square. All sides are equal length and parallel on a rhombus but opposite sides are equal and parallel on a parallelogram. None of the sides are joined by 90 degree angles.