A polygon with 4 or more sides can have a pair of parallel sides.
Not all polygon have two pairs of parallel sides. For example, a square will, but not a triangle.
Yes. A triangle is a type of polygon and it has NO parallel sides!!!!!!!
A four-sided polygon with opposite sides parallel and all sides congruent is a square.
A square is a four-sided polygon with two congruent parallel sides.
The parallel sides of a polygon are sides that are segments of parallel lines. A polygon need not have any parallel lines. A triangle, for example, is a polygon that cannot have parallel lines.
That's a rectangle. Trace around a dollar bill.
Any polygon with four or more sides can have parallel sides.
A polygon with 4 or more sides can have a pair of parallel sides.
No. A parallelogram, for example, is not a regular polygon. Even a rhombus, with parallel sides of equal lengths is not.
Not all polygon have two pairs of parallel sides. For example, a square will, but not a triangle.
There can be no convex polygon with three parallel sides. There are concave polygons with 6 or more sides that have three parallel lines.
Yes. A triangle is a type of polygon and it has NO parallel sides!!!!!!!
It can have parallel sides but not always.
A four-sided polygon with opposite sides parallel and all sides congruent is a square.
A square is a regular polygon with two sets of parallel sides. A parallelogram is an irregular polygon with one set of parallel sides. A rhombus is an irregular polygon with two sets of parallel sides. A rectangle is an irregular polygon with two sets of parallel sides. *Note - a regular polygon is a shape in which all sides are equal in length and all angles are equal in measurement.
A square is a four-sided polygon with two congruent parallel sides.