The type of front where the flow of air on both sides is almost parallel is called a stationary front. In this situation, neither air mass is strong enough to replace the other, resulting in a standoff. The air flows parallel to the boundary between the two air masses, which can lead to prolonged periods of cloudy weather and precipitation in the vicinity of the front.
A warm front ^wrong answer^
A square and a rhombus both have all sides equal and opposite sides parallel.
No. A kite does not have parallel sides (unless it degenerates to a square).
No. In a parallelogram, both pairs of opposite sides are parallel.
False. The sides can be congruent, parallel or both.
A warm front ^wrong answer^
A warm front ^wrong answer^
A stationary front typically has air on both sides moving almost parallel to the front. This front forms when two air masses with different temperatures and densities meet but neither is strong enough to displace the other. This results in the fronts remaining in the same location for an extended period of time.
Yes, a square has two pairs of parallel sides.
A square and a rhombus both have all sides equal and opposite sides parallel.
1/2*(sum of both parallel bases)*height = area multiply both sides by 2 and then divide both sides by (sum of both parallel bases) height = (2*area) divided by (sum of both parallel sides)
No. A kite does not have parallel sides (unless it degenerates to a square).
the answer is no and yes
No. In a parallelogram, both pairs of opposite sides are parallel.
No, even though they are both quadrilaterals (having 4 sides), both pairs of sides of the rectangle are parallel; whereas, only one pair of sides on a trapezoid are parallel.
A trapezoid has at least one pair of parallel sides; a parallelogram has both of its opposing sides parallel.
A parallelogram has both pairs of opposite sides parallel. A trapezoid has only one pair of sides parallel.