A quadrilateral with 4 right angles can only be a rectangle or a square.
A rectangle has only two lines of symmetry - the lines joining the midpoints of its opposite sides. So the answer cannot be a rectangle. A square has the same lines of symmetry as a rectangle, plus the two diagonals - 4 lines in all.
It is called a Rhombus.
A right angle trapezoid
I don't think this is possible. there is not a quadrilateral with these qualities. If it is a quadrilateral, it will automatically have parallel lines, but there is not one that has both. The closest one would be the trapezoid, with a set of parallel lines, but no right angle. The square and rectangle have two sets of parallel lines and 4 right angles.
A quadrilateral is any shape with four sides; angles can be acute or obtuse. A perfect square is the only quadrilateral with only right angles.
It's impossible for a quadrilateral to have no equal sides and have right angles.
rectangle
Such a shape cannot exist.
rhombus
Right-angled Trapezium
It is called a Rhombus.
A rectangle.
A right angle trapezoid
An irregular quadrilateral.
They are rhombus and parallelogram.
I believe that would be a quadrilateral.
a quadrilateral where each angle is a right angle
Your English grammar is at fault. How can it be a 'rectangle' , and then you say 'not a rectangle'. A Quadrilateral is any four sided figure. in 2-dimension. Squares and Rectangles are quadrilaterals with four right angles. Other quadrilaterals , are parallelograms, rhombuses, trapeziums, kites do not have four right angles.