There is one pair of parallel sides.
A trapezoid can have at most one right angle. Not all trapezoids have right angles.
No, a trapezoid does not have four obtuse angles. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides and the other pair of non-parallel sides. The angles of a trapezoid can be a combination of acute, obtuse, and right angles, but it cannot have four obtuse angles.
a trapezoid
It is a trapezoid
trapezoid
Trapezoid
trapezoid
trapezoid
A trapezoid
No, a trapezoid does not have four obtuse angles. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel sides and the other pair of non-parallel sides. The angles of a trapezoid can be a combination of acute, obtuse, and right angles, but it cannot have four obtuse angles.
a trapezoid
trapezoid
It is a trapezoid
Trapezoid
A trapezoid (or trapezium in some regions) has one pair of parallel sides and typically does not have any right angles. The non-parallel sides can be of different lengths and angles, which allows for various trapezoid shapes. This characteristic distinguishes it from rectangles, which have right angles.
An isosceles trapezoid can have either zero, one, or two right angles, depending on its specific dimensions and angles. In a standard isosceles trapezoid, which has one pair of parallel sides and the non-parallel sides being equal in length, it typically has no right angles. However, if designed to have right angles at the base, it can have two right angles.
A right trapezoid is a four-sided polygon with two right angles and two parallel sides.
That would be a trapezoid. A trapezoid does not have to have two right angles it only needs to have two parallel sides. There is not a name for the exact quadrilateral you are looking for but the shape is still within the definition of a trapezoid.