A rectangle. Any quadrilaterial with two pairs of parallel sides is a parallelogram. And each side will be the same dimension as its opposite. It must be if there are two pairs of parallel sides. And if one interior angle is right, then all the interior angles are right angles. You may have a square, but it is only a special case of a rectangle, which you must have if your figure is constructed with the given constraints.
It is a parallelogramIf one of the angles is a right angle (then they all are) and the quadrilateral is a rectangle.If both pairs of sides are equal in length (but none of the angles is a right angle) the quadrilateral is a rhombus.If the sides are equal and one of the angles is a right angle, the quadrilateral is a square.
It is called a Rhombus.
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 rectangle
A Rhombus.
a square
It is a parallelogramIf one of the angles is a right angle (then they all are) and the quadrilateral is a rectangle.If both pairs of sides are equal in length (but none of the angles is a right angle) the quadrilateral is a rhombus.If the sides are equal and one of the angles is a right angle, the quadrilateral is a square.
A rectangle is a 4 sided quadrilateral having 2 pairs of parallel sides and 4 interior right angles.
a trapezoid
A parallelogram.
NO
hexagon
rhombus
It is called a parallelogram.
rectangle
A Rhombus had 2 pairs of parallel sides and has NO right angles. :)
rectangle