A trapezoid has exactly one pair of parallel sides opposite of each other. It is the only quadrilateral with this characteristic.
A quadrilateral with only one pair of parallel sides is a trapezoid.
No, trapezoids are not rectangles. While both shapes have four sides, rectangles have opposite sides that are equal in length and all interior angles are right angles, whereas trapezoids have only one pair of opposite sides that are parallel.
A trapezoid is a 4 sided quadrilateral that has only one pair of opposite parallel sides of different lengths.
No. Parallelograms have only 4 sides with 2 sets of parallel sides: they include squares, rectangles, and rhombuses (rhombi, diamond shapes). Because opposite angles are equal, each pair of parallel sides is equal in length. (For squares and "equilateral rhombi" all four sides are equal in length.)
Actually the trapezium is a shape. Trapezoid is the general group term for shapes of it's general shape. It has only two parallel sides.
A trapezoid has exactly one pair of parallel sides opposite of each other. It is the only quadrilateral with this characteristic.
A quadrilateral with only one pair of parallel sides is a trapezoid.
No, trapezoids are not rectangles. While both shapes have four sides, rectangles have opposite sides that are equal in length and all interior angles are right angles, whereas trapezoids have only one pair of opposite sides that are parallel.
A trapezoid is a 4 sided quadrilateral that has only one pair of opposite parallel sides of different lengths.
The US term for the shape is trapezoid, and has only one pair of parallel sides.(The term trapezium is used for these shapes in the UK and many other countries.)
No. Parallelograms have only 4 sides with 2 sets of parallel sides: they include squares, rectangles, and rhombuses (rhombi, diamond shapes). Because opposite angles are equal, each pair of parallel sides is equal in length. (For squares and "equilateral rhombi" all four sides are equal in length.)
A trapezoid has one and only one set of opposite sides that are parallel. The other pair of opposite sides are not parallel.
Most Shapes has many vertices & Sides. The answer is a '''Circle''' * * * * * Only partly true. Most '''WELL-STUDIED''' shapes have vertices and sides. Most shapes - in nature, for example, are irregular, "random" shapes.
Cylinder shapes only have three sides.
There are an infinite number of shapes that have two or more parallel opposite sides - any even-numbered polygon (hexagons, octagons, decagons, and so on).A quadrilateral with only 1 set of parallel sides is a trapezoid (UK trapezium).A parallelogram has two sets of parallel opposite sides. These would include rhombi and rectangles (and the special case of rectangles which are squares).
This shape has only one pair of opposite sides and no right angles: <