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quadrillaterals has 4 congruent sides?​

Sagot :

Answer:

yes, quadrilateral. has 4 congruent Sides

Answer:

A quadrilateral is a closed shape and a type of polygon that has four sides, four vertices and four angles. It is formed by joining four non-collinear points. The sum of interior angles of quadrilaterals is always equal to 360 degrees.

Quadrilateral: Two-dimensional plane figure e...

Number of sides: 4

Sum of all interior angles: 360 degrees

Number of diagonals: 2

Convex quadrilateral

Euler diagram of some types of simple quadrilaterals. (UK) denotes British English and (US) denotes American English.

Convex quadrilaterals by symmetry, represented with a Hasse diagram.

In a convex quadrilateral all interior angles are less than 180°, and the two diagonals both lie inside the quadrilateral.

Irregular quadrilateral (British English) or trapezium (North American English): no sides are parallel. (In British English, this was once called a trapezoid. For more, see Trapezoid § Trapezium vs Trapezoid)

Trapezium (UK) or trapezoid (US): at least one pair of opposite sides are parallel. Trapezia (UK) and trapezoids (US) include parallelograms.

Isosceles trapezium (UK) or isosceles trapezoid (US): one pair of opposite sides are parallel and the base angles are equal in measure. Alternative definitions are a quadrilateral with an axis of symmetry bisecting one pair of opposite sides, or a trapezoid with diagonals of equal length.

Parallelogram: a quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides. Equivalent conditions are that opposite sides are of equal length; that opposite angles are equal; or that the diagonals bisect each other. Parallelograms include rhombi (including those rectangles called squares) and rhomboids (including those rectangles called oblongs). In other words, parallelograms include all rhombi and all rhomboids, and thus also include all rectangles.

Rhombus, rhomb:[1] all four sides are of equal length (equilateral). An equivalent condition is that the diagonals perpendicularly bisect each other. Informally: "a pushed-over square" (but strictly including a square, too).