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.