No. Three sides of a quadrilateral must total more than the remaining side. As two sides of 6 and one of 1.5 add up to 13.5, that means that the sides could never meet at fourth angle.
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.
You cannot.All that can be said with certainty is that the length of the fourth side can have ANY positive value between (a) the longest minus the sum of the other two sides, and (b) the sum of all three sides.
A rhombus is a quadrilateral having four sides of equal length. A rhombus has two axes of symmetry, both being its diagonals. The opposite sides of a rhombus are parallel to one another. The opposite angles of a rhombus are the same size as one another. If a rhombus has a right angle, then it is a square. Perimeter of a rhombus is four times the length of any side (4 x S). Area of a rhombus is the product of the length of one side and the height. The height is shortest distance between two sides, equal to the length of a line that is perpendicular to both opposite sides. This can be written as: Area = Side x Height (A = SH). * A rhombus has 4 sides, since it is a quadrilateral.
If the quadrilateral is a square then all of its sides are the same length. ac is not one of the sides but is a diagonal which forms the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle with sides ab and bc. According to Pythagoras the sum of the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. As side ab measures 10 then 10 squared = 100. Side bc has the same measurements. The square of side ac must equal 200 (100 + 100) so the length of side ac must equal the square root of 200 (100 + 100) which is 14.14 (to 2 decimal places).
are of square = side length x sidelengthalternatively you could take the square root of which the number you have81= 9x9so the length of each side is 9
No, a quadrilateral must have 4 sides. If it is a proper quadrilateral it must have 4 sides of equal length but if it is an irregular quadrilateral it must have 4 sides but not have equal sides. An example of a quadrilateral could be a square. A pentagon on the other side must have 5 sides.
You could be like the side elevation of a staircase.
Quadrilateral means four sides. Four right angles and four sides is a rectangle and if the sides are equal length it is a square.
All quadrilaterals have four sides, four vertices and four angles. A quadrilateral where all sides have the same length can also be called a square, a rhombus, a rectangle, and a parallelogram. * * * * * If all 4 sides are equal it is a square or a rhombus but not a rectangle or parallelogram.
quadrilateral means having all sides the same length. when you make a shape with 3 obtuse angles and with the same length on the sides, only 3 of them will have the same length which is the sides of the 3 obtuse angles. then the last side will be too long. obviously it is no more quadrilateral.
Yes, sides are equal in length as well.
57mm
The four side lengths do not provide enough information to uniquely identify quadrilateral. However, if any three sides, added together, exceed the length of the fourth, then it is possible to draw a quadrilateral.
A parallelogram is a 4 sided quadrilateral and has 2 pairs of opposite parallel sides
The area of the 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.
A regular quadrilateral has its 4 sides of the same length. If the perimeter (sum of the 4 sides) is 36 it means one side is a fourth of that, or 9.