Trapezoid is like a rectangle but the two sides are slanted inwards so that the top is shorter than the bottom
A rectangle has four right angles. A trapezoid can have at most two.
A rectangle has four right angles; a trapezoid doesn't.
A rectangle has four ninety degree angles, where as a trapezoid does not.
A rectangle must have two (2) pairs of parallel sides, a trapezoid only needs one (1). A rectangle is a quadrilateral with 4 right angles, and a trapezoid is a quadrilateral with 1 pair of opposite parallel sides.
Trapezoid is like a rectangle but the two sides are slanted inwards so that the top is shorter than the bottom
A rectangle has four right angles. A trapezoid can have at most two.
A trapezoid and a rectangle are both polygons.
No, every trapezoid is not a rectangle. There is no overlap between rectangles and trapezoids -- that is, no trapezoid is a rectangle. They are both four-sided quadrilaterals
A rectangle has four right angles; a trapezoid doesn't.
A rectangle has four ninety degree angles, where as a trapezoid does not.
A rectangle must have two (2) pairs of parallel sides, a trapezoid only needs one (1). A rectangle is a quadrilateral with 4 right angles, and a trapezoid is a quadrilateral with 1 pair of opposite parallel sides.
All four angles of a rectangle are right angles. A trapezoid can have at most two right angles.
No, a rectangle is not a trapezoid.
'A square is a type of rectangle, a rectangle is a type of paralellogram, a paralellogram is a type of trapezoid, a trapezoid is a type of quadrilateral.
A rectangle is never a trapezoid because a rectangle does not have exactly 1 pair of parallel sides
A rectangle is not a trapezoid. A trapezoid is defined as a quadrilateral with one pair of parallel sides and another pair that is not parallel. That description cannot be applied to a rectangle. It is only if you define a trapezoid as a quadrilateral with one pair of parallel sides and say nothing at all about the other sides, can a rectangle be said to be a trapezoid. But you would have to be mathematically incompetent to use that as a definition of a trapezoid.