No but it does have parallel line segments of different lengths and 1 line of symmetry
Not always take a trapezoid for example.
Exactly one pair.
A trapezoid has 1 pair of opposite parallel lines of different lengths.
Yes. (Ex. a trapezoid)
No but it does have parallel line segments of different lengths and 1 line of symmetry
Not always take a trapezoid for example.
Exactly one pair.
A trapezoid has 1 pair of opposite parallel lines of different lengths.
US DefinitionA trapezoid is a closed plane figure consisting of four line segments/sides; two of these line segments are parallel (but not equal in length) and two are nonparallel.(in the UK, this is called a trapezium)British DefinitionA trapezoid is a closed plane figure consisting of four line segments/sides; NONE of these line segments are parallel to any of the other line segments of the quadrilateral.(in the US this is just a quadrilateral)*(see the related links for images of trapezoids)
Yes. (Ex. a trapezoid)
A rectangle has four right angles, two parallel pairs of line segments, and the lines are perpendicular. A trapezoid has one pair of parallel angles, and the angles do not have to be right, although a trapezoid with a right angle is called a right angle trapezoid, and a trapezoid with no parallel segments is a trapezium.
They can not be line segments on the same line, but they can both be line segments.
Yes, it has sides that are straight line segments. Exactly one pair of opposite sides is parallel. Polygons do not have curved sides.
A trapezoid has four line segments that forms its four sides.
There is no specific name - other than what you used: "a pair of parallel line segments".
Letters that have parallel line segments are H, E, F, M, and N