parallels
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoBy using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.
rectangle, square, rhombus
That is called a rectangle.
The length and width of a rectangle is the same as the length and width of the opposite sides.
Opposite sides of a rectangle must always be equal.
rectangle
By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.
You just described a run-of-the-mill rectangle. A special case of the rectangle, where all sides are equal, is the square. But if you have a quadrilateral with four right angles and one pair of opposite sides is longer than the other pair of opposite sides, you have a rectangle. Period.
A parallelogram with opposite parallel sides would fit the given description.
a rectangle
That is called a rectangle.
rectangle, square, rhombus
The length and width of a rectangle is the same as the length and width of the opposite sides.
Yes opposite sides are parallel in a rectangle
The opposite sides of every individual rectangle are equal, but the opposite sides of one rectangle are not necessarily equal to those of another rectangle.
No. A rectangle has opposite sides congruent. If consecutive sides are also congruent, then your rectangle is a square.
A square is a rectangle because the definition of a rectangle is that it has four straight sides and the opposite sides are equal in length. Squares have four straight sides, and their opposite sides match up in length. Therefore, a square is also a rectangle.