An isosceles triangle has no parallel sides but it does have two equal sides
Yes the non parallel sides of an isosceles trapezoid are congruent
No. All trapezoids have only one pair of parallel sides which are different in length. In an isosceles trapezoid the lengths of the two non-parallel sides are equal.
No, it is not.
Trapezoid
No triangle has parallel sides but an isosceles triangle has two equal sides of the same lengths.
An isosceles triangle has no parallel sides but it does have two equal sides
Yes the non parallel sides of an isosceles trapezoid are congruent
Well, honey, an isosceles triangle has two sides that are equal in length, but that doesn't mean they're parallel. In fact, the only time an isosceles triangle would have two pairs of parallel sides is if it magically transformed into a parallelogram overnight. So, no, an isosceles triangle does not have two pairs of parallel sides.
An isosceles triangle. It has two pairs of equal sides, which are also not parallel.
No. A parallelogram has two sets of parallel sides.
The practical answer is a parallelogram, which has two sets of parallel opposite sides and two sets of equal opposite angles. This includes rhombi, rectangles, and squares.A trapezoid (trapezium) has one set of parallel opposite sides that are not equal, but may have non-parallel opposite sides equal in length (isosceles trapezoid).
No. All trapezoids have only one pair of parallel sides which are different in length. In an isosceles trapezoid the lengths of the two non-parallel sides are equal.
when its two non-parallel sides are congruent
No, it is not.
Trapezoid
No, a cut cannot be made between two parallel sides of an isosceles trapezoid to create two isosceles trapezoids. An isosceles trapezoid has only one pair of parallel sides, so cutting between them would result in two separate shapes, neither of which would be an isosceles trapezoid. The resulting shapes would likely be irregular quadrilaterals or triangles, depending on the location of the cut.