triangle
The shape you are describing is a trapezoid. A trapezoid has two pairs of parallel sides, with one pair longer than the other. It can have two acute angles and two obtuse angles, depending on the lengths of the sides. The acute angles are typically smaller than 90 degrees, while the obtuse angles are larger than 90 degrees.
A trapezoid
A square. A rectangle.
parallelogram... slanted rectangular box.. therefore no right angles
Does the shape you are looking for look something like this <> if the lines met if so the shape you era thinking of is a parallelogram A rhombus is a parallelogram with all of the sides the same length
It could be a hexagon which is stretched out so that one pair of opposite angles become acute - but they must be different otherwise you will have three pairs of parallel sides.
It could be a hexagon which is stretched out so that one pair of opposite angles become acute - but they must be different otherwise you will have three pairs of parallel sides.
parallelogram
A parrelellegram
a parralellogram or however its spelt
Any parallelogram except a rectangle.
A Hexagon has 3 pairs of parallel line and all angles are obtuse.
A parallelogram
rhombus
The shape you are describing is a trapezoid. A trapezoid has two pairs of parallel sides, with one pair longer than the other. It can have two acute angles and two obtuse angles, depending on the lengths of the sides. The acute angles are typically smaller than 90 degrees, while the obtuse angles are larger than 90 degrees.
A quadrilateral is a four-sided polygon (closed shape made with line segments). Quadrilaterals have four angles (vertices) and come in many different shapes, depending on the length of their sides and the kinds of angles they have. The five most common quadrilaterals are the rectangle, square, parallelogram, rhombus, and trapezoid. A rectangle is a quadrilateral with opposite sides congruent (same length) and parallel. It has four right (90º) angles. A square has ALL four sides that are congruent, and two pairs of parallel sides. It also has four right angles. A parallelogram has two pairs of parallel sides. They form two acute and two obtuse angles. A rhombus has two pairs of parallel sides, but all sides are congruent. They also form two acute and two obtuse angles. Finally, a trapezoid, has only one pair of parallel sides. The parallel sides are NOT congruent. A trapezoid can be formed by two acute and two obtuse angles, or by two right angles, one acute, and one obtuse angle.
None