Meet at its vertices.
Yes.
2 pairs of consecutive congruent sides
A square.
Rhombus.
No. A rectangle has opposite sides congruent. If consecutive sides are also congruent, then your rectangle is a square.
All sides of a quadrilateral are consecutive, by definition.Not really. In the quadrilateral ABCD the sides AB and CD are opposite, but not consecutive. What is true for a quadrilateral is that any pair of sides that is opposite is not consecutive, and any pair that is not opposite is consecutive.The question asks what shape quadrilateral has 2 consecutive sides. If the question means "2 and only 2" consecutive sides the answer is that no such shape exists. If it means at least 2 consecutive sides then any quadrilateral fits the bill.If, as I suspect, the questioner meant 2 parallel sides, the answer is a trapezium.
The only thing that can be said about consecutive sides of a quadrilateral is that they meet at a vertex. There is no restriction on the angle, nor on their respective lengths.
In a rectangle, consecutive sides are the pairs of sides that share a common vertex or corner. For example, the top and right sides, or the bottom and left sides of a rectangle are consecutive sides. These sides are perpendicular to each other, forming right angles at their intersection points.
Right after the other
Meet at its vertices.
Yes.
2 pairs of consecutive congruent sides
Rhombus
A square.
Rhombus.
trapezoid