0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views4 pages

What Is A Quadrilateral

A quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides and four vertices. There are different types of quadrilaterals defined by their properties, such as whether the sides are equal in length or the angles are right angles. The most common types include parallelograms (two pairs of parallel sides), rectangles (four right angles), squares (four equal sides and four right angles), rhombuses (four equal sides), and trapezoids (one pair of parallel sides). A Venn diagram can show the relationships between these types, with squares lying in the intersection of rectangles and rhombuses since a square has the properties of both.

Uploaded by

api-140032165
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views4 pages

What Is A Quadrilateral

A quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides and four vertices. There are different types of quadrilaterals defined by their properties, such as whether the sides are equal in length or the angles are right angles. The most common types include parallelograms (two pairs of parallel sides), rectangles (four right angles), squares (four equal sides and four right angles), rhombuses (four equal sides), and trapezoids (one pair of parallel sides). A Venn diagram can show the relationships between these types, with squares lying in the intersection of rectangles and rhombuses since a square has the properties of both.

Uploaded by

api-140032165
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

What is a Quadrilateral

What is a Quadrilateral In Euclidean plane geometry, a quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides (or edges) and four vertices or corners. Sometimes, the term quadrangle is used, by analogy with triangle, and sometimes tetragon for consistency with pentagon (5-sided), hexagon (6-sided) and so on. The word quadrilateral is made of the words quad (meaning "four") and lateral (meaning "of sides"). The origin of the word quadrilateral is from the two Latin words quadri, a variant of four, and latus meaning "side." Quadrilaterals are simple (not self-intersecting) or complex (selfintersecting), also called crossed. Simple quadrilaterals are either convex or concave. The interior angles of a simple quadrilateral add up to 360 degrees of arc. This is a special case of the n-gon interior angle sum formula (n 2) 180. In a crossed quadrilateral, the interior angles on either side of the crossing add up to 720. A parallelogram is 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 also include the square, rectangle, rhombus and rhomboid. Know More About Solving Linear Equations Math.Tutorvista.com

Page No. :- 1/4

Rhombus or rhomb: all four sides are of equal length. Equivalent conditions are that opposite sides are parallel and opposite angles are equal, or that the diagonals perpendicularly bisect each other. An informal description is "a pushed-over square" (including a square). Rhomboid: a parallelogram in which adjacent sides are of unequal lengths and angles are oblique (not right angles). Informally: "a pushed-over rectangle with no right angles." Rectangle: all four angles are right angles. An equivalent condition is that the diagonals bisect each other and are equal in length. Informally: "a box or oblong" (including a square). Square (regular quadrilateral): all four sides are of equal length (equilateral), and all four angles are right angles. An equivalent condition is that opposite sides are parallel (a square is a parallelogram), that the diagonals perpendicularly bisect each other, and are of equal length. A quadrilateral is a square if and only if it is both a rhombus and a rectangle (four equal sides and four equal angles). Oblong: a term sometimes used to denote a rectangle which has unequal adjacent sides (i.e. a rectangle that is not a square). There are many different kinds of quadrilaterals, but all have several things in common: all of them have four sides, are coplanar, have two diagonals, and the sum of their four interior angles equals 360 degrees. This is how they are alike, but what makes them different? We know many quadrilaterals by their special shapes and properties, like squares. Remember, if you see the word quadrilateral, it does not necessarily mean a figure with special properties like a square or rectangle! In word problems, be careful not to assume that a quadrilateral has parallel sides or equal sides unless that is stated. A Venn diagram uses overlapping circles to show relationships between groups of objects. All "quadrilaterals" can be separated into three sub-groups: general quadrilaterals, parallelograms and trapezoids. Learn More Statistics Homework Help Math.Tutorvista.com

Page No. :- 2/4

Is a rectangle always a rhombus? No, because all four sides of a rectangle don't have to be equal. However, the sets of rectangles and rhombuses do intersect, and their intersection is the set of squaresall squares are both a rectangle and a rhombus. We can put squares in the intersection of the two circles. From this diagram, you can see that a square is a quadrilateral, a parallelogram, a rectangle, and a rhombus! Is a trapezoid a parallelogram? No, because a trapezoid has only one pair of parallel sides. That is why we must show the set of trapezoids in a separate circle on the Venn diagram. What about kites? Kites are quadrilaterals that can be parallelograms. If their two pairs of sides are equal, it becomes a rhombus, and if their angles are equal, it becomes a square.

Math.Tutorvista.com

Page No. :- 4/4

ThankYou

Math.TutorVista.com

You might also like