It has two pairs of equal sides.
A kite has two pairs of equal sides with no parallel sides.
1 pair of 2 angles
No. They cannot equal 180 degrees unless the kite is square.The kite shape (aka deltoid) is a special case: a bisymmetrical trapezoid with one pair of angles (the sides) equal, and the others not equal (top, bottom). There are two pairs of adjacent equilateral sides.
I believe its a kite- but not a typical 'kite' that shows equal sides. Check out the picture of the 'kite' on www.math.com (under Geometry-Quadrilaterals). Hope this helps :) * * * * * Hope it does not help, because it is the wrong answer. A kite must have two pair of equal sides though unlike a parallelogram, these are adjacent sides, not opposite ones. A quadrilateral, as described in the question does not have a special name.
A pair is two A pair of socks = two socks
A kite or arrowhead.A kite or arrowhead.A kite or arrowhead.A kite or arrowhead.
Two pair.
A kite.
No but they are both quadrilaterals.
A kite has two pairs of equal sides with no parallel sides.
It depends on the kite but on most they are
Kites have two pair of adjacent sides that are congruent. The opposite sides are not parallel.
A quadrilateral in the shape of a kite has no parallel sides
a kite (two pairs of adjacent congruent sides) or a trapezoid (one pair of parallel sides).
A kite has two pairs of sides and each pair is made up of adjacent sides that are equal in length. A rhombus has 4 equal sides. So most kites are NOT rhombuses, but if the two pair happen to be equal, then the kite is a rhombus.
Both are quadrilaterals. Both have two pairs of side of equal length. In a kite they are adjacent sides, in a rectangle they are opposite. A kite has one pair of equal angles, all of a rectangle's angles are equal. In a kite, one diagonals bisects the other, in a rectangle both do.
It is a deltoid or a kite.