The shape is a parallelogram (special cases: rhombus, rectangle, square).
No, a kite does not have two pairs of opposite sides that are parallel. In a kite, one pair of adjacent sides is equal in length, while the other pair is also equal, but the opposite sides are not parallel. This distinguishes kites from parallelograms, which do have two pairs of parallel sides.
A parallelogram is such a shape.
The description fits a square or a rhombus. In a square, all sides are of equal length, opposite sides are parallel, and all angles are equal (90 degrees). In a rhombus, all sides are also of equal length and opposite sides are parallel, but the angles are not necessarily equal, as they can vary while remaining equal in opposite pairs.
A quadrilateral that has two pairs of parallel sides and two pairs of sides of equal length is called a rectangle. In a rectangle, opposite sides are both equal in length and parallel, making it a specific type of parallelogram. If all four sides are equal in length as well, it becomes a square, which is a special case of a rectangle.
The shape you are describing is a rectangle. In a rectangle, there are two pairs of parallel sides, and opposite sides are equal in length. Additionally, the opposite angles are equal, with each angle measuring 90 degrees. A square is a specific type of rectangle where all sides are equal in length.
Yes. A parallelogram has two pairs of opposite sides parallel (and each pair of equal length). A rhombus has two pairs of opposite sides parallel (and each of those pairs of opposite sides are of equal length), thus it is a parallelogram. It is a special case of parallelogram where all four sides are equal in length, not just the opposite pairs.
square
No, a kite does not have two pairs of opposite sides that are parallel. In a kite, one pair of adjacent sides is equal in length, while the other pair is also equal, but the opposite sides are not parallel. This distinguishes kites from parallelograms, which do have two pairs of parallel sides.
A parallelogram is such a shape.
The description fits a square or a rhombus. In a square, all sides are of equal length, opposite sides are parallel, and all angles are equal (90 degrees). In a rhombus, all sides are also of equal length and opposite sides are parallel, but the angles are not necessarily equal, as they can vary while remaining equal in opposite pairs.
A quadrilateral that has two pairs of parallel sides and two pairs of sides of equal length is called a rectangle. In a rectangle, opposite sides are both equal in length and parallel, making it a specific type of parallelogram. If all four sides are equal in length as well, it becomes a square, which is a special case of a rectangle.
The shape you are describing is a rectangle. In a rectangle, there are two pairs of parallel sides, and opposite sides are equal in length. Additionally, the opposite angles are equal, with each angle measuring 90 degrees. A square is a specific type of rectangle where all sides are equal in length.
Yes, because a square is a parallelogram
A parallelogram is a geometric quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides. The opposite sides and opposite angles are equal in length.
no\ * * * * * Wrong answer! A parallelogram has two pairs of parallel lines, in which opposite sides are of equal length. A rhombus also has two pairs of parallel lines and, in addition, they are all of the same length.
A parallelogram has two pairs of opposite sides that are equal in length and parallel. A rectangle has two pairs of opposite sides that are equal in length and are parallel. Thus all rectangles are parallelograms. (A rectangle has the extra condition that all its angles are equal at 90°, thus all parallelograms are not rectangles.) There cannot be a rectangle that is not a parallelogram.
rhombus