Kites or arrowheads.
Parallelograms (if the equal sides are opposite one another) or kites (if they are adjacent).
The adjacent sides of very few quadrilaterals are equal. This is most common in the square and the rhombus, but does not often happen in quadrilaterals such as the kite, the delta, the rectangle or the trapezium.
it cant be possible
Because they are both 4 sided quadrilaterals. * * * * * However, a typical kite has two pairs of adjacent sides which are equal whereas a in a rhombus all four sides are equal.
A square or a rhombus
Parallelograms (if the equal sides are opposite one another) or kites (if they are adjacent).
The adjacent sides of very few quadrilaterals are equal. This is most common in the square and the rhombus, but does not often happen in quadrilaterals such as the kite, the delta, the rectangle or the trapezium.
it cant be possible
Because they are both 4 sided quadrilaterals. * * * * * However, a typical kite has two pairs of adjacent sides which are equal whereas a in a rhombus all four sides are equal.
No, all quadrilaterals are trapeziums. I kite must have 2 pairs of adjacent sides equal in length.
A square or a rhombus
A kite, a rhombus, a square must have two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal. Irregular polygon with 5 or more sides can have two pairs of equal sides.
any quadrilaterals
A rectangle has two pairs of parallel and congruent sides. An equilateral rectangle, or square, has four equal sides. Other quadrilaterals include trapezoids, which have two adjacent and equal sides, parallelograms, which have two pairs of parallel and congruent sides, and rhombi, which have four equal sides. (The a rectangle is a type of parallelogram. What differentiates it is angle configuration. A rhombus is likewise differentiated from a square by angle configuration.)
2 pairs of adjacent sides are equal
There are three main types of quadrilaterals: parallelograms, trapezoids, and kites. Parallelograms have opposite sides parallel and equal in length. Trapezoids have one pair of parallel sides. Kites have two pairs of adjacent sides that are equal in length.
One pair of equal angles can be found in an isosceles triangle, where the angles opposite the equal sides are congruent. For the equal adjacent sides, consider a rectangle, where each pair of adjacent sides (length and width) is equal to the corresponding sides on the opposite side. Thus, in a rectangle, we have two pairs of equal adjacent sides, while the opposite angles are also equal.