This statement describes a rectangle, which has four right angles but does not require all sides to be equal. In a rectangle, opposite sides are equal in length, while adjacent sides can differ. This contrasts with a square, where all sides are equal, and all angles remain right angles. Thus, while rectangles fit the description, squares are a specific type of rectangle with equal sides.
You don't tell us enough information. In a square, there are four sides and four angles. The sides are all equal and the angles are all right angles. In a rectangle, there are four sides and four angles The opposite sides are equal and the angles are all right angles. There is no other shape in which all angles are right angles.
A square has four right angles and all sides are equal.
No, not necessarily. A parallelogram can have all sides equal, but still not be a square.
Shapes with equal adjacent sides include squares and rhombuses. In a square, all four sides are equal, and all angles are right angles. A rhombus also has all sides equal, but its angles are not necessarily right angles. Additionally, certain parallelograms can have equal adjacent sides if they are specifically constructed to do so.
a rectangle
A shape with four sides that are all equal but has no right angles is a rhombus. In a rhombus, opposite angles are equal, and the sides are of equal length, but the angles are not necessarily 90 degrees. This gives it a distinctive slanted appearance. A square is a special case of a rhombus where all angles are right angles.
A quadrilateral that has no right angles and has four sides of equal length is a rhombus. In a rhombus, all sides are equal, but the angles are not necessarily 90 degrees. It can have acute or obtuse angles, distinguishing it from a square, which has right angles.
All angles equal = all sides equal = equilateral. Two angles equal = two sides equal = isosceles. All angles different = all sides different = scalene. An isosceles or scalene triangle may be right-angled or obtuse-angled if one of its angles is a right angle or obtuse angle (respectively).
A polygon with four equal sides and no right angles is called a rhombus. In a rhombus, all sides are of equal length, but the angles are not necessarily 90 degrees; they can be acute or obtuse. This characteristic distinguishes it from a square, which has both equal sides and right angles.
It is a rhombus that has 4 equal sides but no right angles.
A pyrimid.. maybe? It's a square.
All "parallelograms" have opposite sides that are parallel. If all four sides have an equal length and the angles are not all right angles, it is a rhombus. If there is any right angle, then they are all right angles and the parallelogram is a square.(note : it is not possible for a quadrilateral to have four equal sides without being one of these parallelograms.)