a squareof course
A shape that has two parallel lines and no perpendicular lines is a trapezoid, specifically an isosceles trapezoid. In this shape, one pair of opposite sides is parallel, while the other pair is not perpendicular to the parallel sides. This creates a unique geometry without right angles. Another example could be a parallelogram, which also has two pairs of parallel sides but does not necessarily have any perpendicular lines.
A capital "H."
A shape that has two parallel lines and one perpendicular line is a right-angled triangle. In this triangle, one of the sides can be considered the base with the other being the height, which is perpendicular to the base. The two parallel lines can be imagined as the two sides of a right-angled triangle that are extended. Alternatively, this configuration can also represent a trapezoid if the opposite sides are parallel and one side is perpendicular to the base.
No. They are contradictory
rhombus
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A capital "H."
A trapezoid has 2 parallel lines. It may or may not have perpendicular lines.
Two lines are parallel if and only if they have the same slope. Two lines are perpendicular if the product of their slopes is -1. If neither of these conditions are met, the lines are nether parallel, or perpendicular.
No. They are contradictory
A parallelogram has 2 pairs of parallel lines and in the form of a rectangle it has 2 pairs of parallel lines and 4 perpendicular lines that meet at each of its corners at right angles.
Put 2 lines on the perpendicular sides and put 1 line for the parallel sides
Yellow
A pentagon can have 0, 1 or 2 pairs of parallel lines. It can have 0 to 4 lines perpendicular to an adjacent line. A rhombus must have two pairs of parallel lines and none of them may be perpendicular to any other.
A trapezoid has two parallel lines.
Rectangles are made up of 2 sets of parallel lines, which are perpendicular to one another.