It could be a right angle triangle
trapazoid
trapezoid
The question does not make any sense. "Adjacent" means next to. A shape cannot be next to itself, and if it is next to another shape, then you have two shapes. "perpendicular" means at right angles (or 90 degrees) to. Again, a shape cannot be perpendicular to itself.
square
It fits the description of a right angle triangle
trapazoid
trapezoid
The question does not make any sense. "Adjacent" means next to. A shape cannot be next to itself, and if it is next to another shape, then you have two shapes. "perpendicular" means at right angles (or 90 degrees) to. Again, a shape cannot be perpendicular to itself.
The question does not make any sense. "Adjacent" means next to. A shape cannot be next to itself, and if it is next to another shape, then you have two shapes. "perpendicular" means at right angles (or 90 degrees) to. Again, a shape cannot be perpendicular to itself.
square
It fits the description of a right angle triangle
A shape that has 2 parallel lines and 4 perpendicular lines is a rectangle. In a rectangle, the opposite sides are parallel, while the adjacent sides are perpendicular to each other. Therefore, a rectangle fits the description of having two sets of parallel lines and four right angles formed by the perpendicular lines.
No, the adjacent sides of a parallelogram are not parallel; rather, they are non-parallel sides that meet at an angle. In a parallelogram, opposite sides are parallel and equal in length, while adjacent sides are of different lengths and form the angles of the shape. This characteristic distinguishes parallelograms from rectangles and squares, where adjacent sides are perpendicular.
A shape that has 2 sets of parallel sides and 4 sets of perpendicular sides is a rectangle. In a rectangle, opposite sides are both equal and parallel, while adjacent sides meet at right angles, creating perpendicular intersections. This characteristic makes rectangles a specific type of parallelogram.
A rectangle has both parallel lines and perpendicular sides. In a rectangle, opposite sides are parallel to each other, while adjacent sides meet at right angles, creating perpendicular intersections. This unique combination of properties distinguishes rectangles from other quadrilaterals.
shape no pairs of perpendicular sides
A rhombus has parallel lines but no perpendicular lines.