A cuboid. Or a hexagonal prism. In fact any prism whose base has an even number of sides will have three pairs of opposite parallel congruent faces. All but the cuboid will also have other faces but the question does not exclude them.
a rectangular prism
* both pairs of opposite sides are parallel * both pairs of opposite sides are congruent * both pairs of opposite angles are congruent * one pair of opposite sides are parallel and congruent * both diagonals bisect each other * all consecutive angle pairs are supplementary
No, it doesn't have to be. A quadrilateral can definitely be a parallelogram only if: - Both pairs of opposite sides are parallel. - Both pairs of opposite sides are congruent. - One pair of opposite sides are both congruent and parallel. - Both pairs of opposite angles are congruent. - The diagonals bisect each other.
Any parallelogram.
They are cuboids - brick shaped objects. It has six rectangular faces and these come in 3 parallel and congruent pairs.
a rectangular prism
Three pairs.
Both pairs of opposite sides are parallel + congruent, and both pairs of opposite angles are also congruent.
* both pairs of opposite sides are parallel * both pairs of opposite sides are congruent * both pairs of opposite angles are congruent * one pair of opposite sides are parallel and congruent * both diagonals bisect each other * all consecutive angle pairs are supplementary
No, it doesn't have to be. A quadrilateral can definitely be a parallelogram only if: - Both pairs of opposite sides are parallel. - Both pairs of opposite sides are congruent. - One pair of opposite sides are both congruent and parallel. - Both pairs of opposite angles are congruent. - The diagonals bisect each other.
A rectangular cuboid would fit the given description
parallelogram.
Any parallelogram.
They are cuboids - brick shaped objects. It has six rectangular faces and these come in 3 parallel and congruent pairs.
That's a rhombus.
That is called a rectangle.
That's a parallelogram.