Both are 4 sided quadrilaterals Both have 4 interior angles that add up to 360 degrees Both have 2 diagonals Both will tessellate Both have a perimeter which is the sum of their 4 sides
Isosceles trapezoids have 2 (occasionally 3) equal sides and have 2 pairs of equal angles, but that's not case if they're not isosceles.
No but they do have one set of parallel sides
Trapezoids are not considered parallelograms because parallelograms have 2 pairs of parallel sides, whereas trapezoids have only one. Some definitions of trapezoid say "at least one pair of parallel sides" in which case, some trapezoids would be parallelograms (the ones that have 2 pairs of parallel sides), but most textbooks in the US now define trapezoids as "exactly one pair of parallel sides."
No trapezoids are not parallelograms. Trapezoids are actually quadrilaterals and they have one pair of opposite sides. Parallelograms by definition have 2 pairs of parallel sides.
Yes that is correct because a rhombus has 2 pairs of parallel sides whereas a trapezoid has only 1 pair of parallel sides
Trapezoids and rhombuses are quadrilateral shapes. A trapezoid has 2 sides that are parallel and a rhombus has 4 sides that equal the same length.
4
Squares and Rhombuses
no
Both are 4 sided quadrilaterals Both have 4 interior angles that add up to 360 degrees Both have 2 diagonals Both will tessellate Both have a perimeter which is the sum of their 4 sides
No. Isosceles trapezoids don't have 2 sets of equal sides, which is what a parallelogram is.
squares, rectangles, trapezoids, rhombuses
2 rhombuses
Isosceles trapezoids have 2 (occasionally 3) equal sides and have 2 pairs of equal angles, but that's not case if they're not isosceles.
No but they do have one set of parallel sides
Trapezoids are not considered parallelograms because parallelograms have 2 pairs of parallel sides, whereas trapezoids have only one. Some definitions of trapezoid say "at least one pair of parallel sides" in which case, some trapezoids would be parallelograms (the ones that have 2 pairs of parallel sides), but most textbooks in the US now define trapezoids as "exactly one pair of parallel sides."