Oh honey, let me lay down some geometry truth for you. A trapezoid is like a rebellious teenager - it can have all sorts of wonky sides and angles. But a rectangle? Oh no, honey, that's a whole different breed. Rectangles have those nice right angles and equal sides. So, to answer your question, nope, not every trapezoid can be a rectangle.
'A square is a type of rectangle, a rectangle is a type of paralellogram, a paralellogram is a type of trapezoid, a trapezoid is a type of quadrilateral.
A trapezoid and a rectangle are both polygons.
A rectangle is never a trapezoid because a rectangle does not have exactly 1 pair of parallel sides
A rectangle is not a trapezoid. A trapezoid is defined as a quadrilateral with one pair of parallel sides and another pair that is not parallel. That description cannot be applied to a rectangle. It is only if you define a trapezoid as a quadrilateral with one pair of parallel sides and say nothing at all about the other sides, can a rectangle be said to be a trapezoid. But you would have to be mathematically incompetent to use that as a definition of a trapezoid.
a trapezoid has 1 pair of parallel lines and a rectangle has 2 parallel lines
No, it is not.
no it is not
'A square is a type of rectangle, a rectangle is a type of paralellogram, a paralellogram is a type of trapezoid, a trapezoid is a type of quadrilateral.
No but a trapezoid and a rectangle are both 4 sided quadrilaterals
Because they are both 4 sided quadrilaterals
A trapezoid and a rectangle are both polygons.
A square a rectangle, rhombus, trapezoid, parallelogram and a kite
A rectangle has four ninety degree angles, where as a trapezoid does not.
A rectangle has four right angles; a trapezoid doesn't.
No, it is not true that every trapezoid is a rectangle. A trapezoid is defined as a quadrilateral with at least one pair of parallel sides, while a rectangle is a specific type of quadrilateral that has four right angles. Therefore, while all rectangles are trapezoids (since they have two parallel sides), not all trapezoids meet the criteria to be rectangles.
No, a rectangle is not a trapezoid.
A rectangle is never a trapezoid because a rectangle does not have exactly 1 pair of parallel sides