CliffsNotes To Go Sweepstakes -- Enter Now to Win an iPod touch Loaded with Cliffs Study Apps

Did "New Moon" change your allegiance to the Twilight characters?

Still Team Edward
Still Team Jacob
Switched from Team Edward to Team Jacob
Switched from Team Jacob to Team Edward
I still cannot decide!

View Results

What are quadrilaterals?

In its simplest definition, a quadrilateral is a geometrical form with four sides. The tricky part comes in when the shape shifts from a straightforward square to something that looks more like a kite or your dining room table.

Take trapezoids and isosceles trapezoids, for example. These quadrilaterals have only one pair of opposite sides parallel. A rhombus, a rectangle, and a parallelogram all have two sets of parallel sides, but they are not the same in appearance. Each figure has its own associated theorems that differentiate them.

Here are a few of many theorems that you'll use in geometry to determine a specific quadrilateral:

  • Opposite angles of a parallelogram are equal.
  • If the diagonals of a quadrilateral bisect each other, then it is a parallelogram.
  • The diagonals of a rectangle are equal.
  • The diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular to one another.

By the way, a square has all the properties of the parallelogram and the rectangle and the rhombus; it's a quadrilateral with all right angles and all equal sides!

Cite this article