Want this question answered?
They are parallel sides that are equal in length
The diagonals of a parallelogram are parallel and the same length.
Area of a trapezoid = 1/2 of (length of one of the parallel sides + length of the other parallel side) times (distance between the two parallel sides)
A trapezium has one set of parallel sides of unequal length. A rhombus has two pairs of parallel sides, all of equal length.
There is no relationship. Knowing the length of one of them doesn't tell you the length of the other one.
They are just dating.
The radius is excatly half of the diameter
The length of one arm is about 40% of your height
A trapezoid has two parallel sides, and two that are not. Call the distance between the two parallel sides the height (H). Add the length of the two parallel sides (L1 + L2), multiple this by the height (H) and then divide by 2. This can be experessed as - ((L1 + L2) * H ) / 2 Remember, L1 and L2 are the length of the parallel sides, and H is the distance between the parallel sides. We do not care about the length or angle of the other sides.
The area of a square is the square of its side length.
zooming in decreases the focal length
In order to describe parallel, you need 2 lines to be parallel to each other. The lines will lie in the same plane, and the right-angle distance between the 2 lines will be constant for the entire length of the lines. Since lines are infinite length in length, they will never intersect.