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A rhombus, I believe.
If in a quadrilateral, there are two pairs of parallel sides, then it will be a parallelogram, and If in a quadrilateral, two pairs of opposite sides are of the same lengths, then it will be a parallelogram
the same as a regular quadrilateral, 4
It may be. A quadrilateral has four sides, but they need not be all the same length, nor parallel to each other. It's true that a parallelogram *is* a quadrilateral.
Assuming "liths" is an unusual way of spelling lengths, you cannot because a quadrilateral is not a rigid shape. It can be deformed into a quadrilateral with the same sides but a different area. This can be illustrated by thinking of a square deforming into a rhombus. Same sides but different area.
the fewest sides of the same length a quadrilateral can have is 2. it can be in whatever shape as long as the each pair or lines has the same equal length. * * * * * Wrong! The correct answer is 0. All four sides of a quadrilateral can have different lengths. Such a quadrilateral has no specific name to distinguish it from other plane figures with four straight sides.
A rhombus, I believe.
Not necessarily. A quadrilateral is made up of 4 sides but they don't have to be the same. Some, like a square and a rhombus, have equal sides but a trapezium can have 4 different sides.
The name for a quadrilateral with 4 sides of all different lengths is simply "quadrilateral". All of the specializations of quadrilaterals: parallelogram, trapezoid, kite, rhombus, rectangle, and square, have at least one pair sides with the same length.
If in a quadrilateral, there are two pairs of parallel sides, then it will be a parallelogram, and If in a quadrilateral, two pairs of opposite sides are of the same lengths, then it will be a parallelogram
If in a quadrilateral, there are two pairs of parallel sides, then it will be a parallelogram, and If in a quadrilateral, two pairs of opposite sides are of the same lengths, then it will be a parallelogram
Trapezium (or Trapezoid)...its the same shape. Also, any irregular quadrilateral that doesn't have sides of the same length.
the same as a regular quadrilateral, 4
It may be. A quadrilateral has four sides, but they need not be all the same length, nor parallel to each other. It's true that a parallelogram *is* a quadrilateral.
An Isosceles trapezoid has four sides (is a quadrilateral) with a pair of parallel sides and the other two sides of equal length; whereas An isosceles triangle has three sides with a pair of sides of the same length and the other side a different length.
Assuming "liths" is an unusual way of spelling lengths, you cannot because a quadrilateral is not a rigid shape. It can be deformed into a quadrilateral with the same sides but a different area. This can be illustrated by thinking of a square deforming into a rhombus. Same sides but different area.
They are quadrilateral shapes whose opposite sides are parallel. In a parallelogram, one pairs of parallel sides may be of a different length to the other pair; in a rhombus all four are the same length.