It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.
The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.
The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.
It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.
The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.
The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.
It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.
The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.
The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.
It could look like a child's drawing of a house: a rectangular shape with a triangular roof on top.
The vertical sides of the rectangle, and the sloped sides of the roof would be the two congruent pairs of sides.
The angles at the base of the rectangle and at the base of the roof would be the two pairs of congruent angles.
No, a regular pentagon cannot have congruent sides but non-congruent angles. By definition, a regular pentagon has all sides of equal length and all interior angles equal. In a regular pentagon, the angles are each 108 degrees, ensuring that both the sides and angles are congruent. If the sides are congruent but the angles are not, it would be classified as an irregular pentagon instead.
An... irregular pentagon?
yes
This is a parallelogram. The first requirement is 2 pairs of congruent sides where the congruent sides are not adjacent. This is like a rectangle (excluding a square) that has two pairs of congruent sides where the congruent sides are not adjacent. But the angles are not all congruent (as set in the question) which pushes the shape into the "next less regular" shape, the parallelogram. The angles will not all be congruent, but it will have 2 pairs of congruent angles. There is no way to avoid the 2 pairs of congruent angles because of the requirement that the shape must have 2 pairs of congruent sides (the first requirement).
Two pairs of congruent angles and one pair of congruent sides ( sides not between the pairs of angles ).
A rectangle has 4 congruent angles. 90 degrees. It is also a parallelogram, 2 pairs of congruent sides.
no
Angles and sides are congruent when they are identical. A shape with four identical sides and angles is a square.
is a regular pentagon if all its angles are congruent and is a general pentagon if they are not.
A Rhombus.
A regular pentagon
Sometimes. For a regular pentagon, all the sides and interior angles are congruent. However, this isn't the case for some pentagons.