A quadrilateral is a geometric figure having four sides and four angles which always total 360°.
We will discuss all types of quadrilaterals except the concave quadrilateral. (See diagram).
This type of quadrilateral has one angle greater than 180°. (Angles greater than 180° are called concave angles). These quadrilaterals are not discussed much in a typical geometry course and are not among the quadrilaterals with which you are familiar.
Generally, all a quadrilateral needs to be classified as such is four sides. However, there are six specific quadrilaterals that are worth discussing in detail.
Trapezoids
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First, it is important to state the difference in definitions between British and American usage.
The British use the term trapezoid to refer to a quadrilateral with no parallel sides and a trapezium is a quadrilateral with two parallel sides.
The American usage is the exact opposite of the British usage: trapezoid – two parallel sides trapezium – no parallel sides.
The only requirement for a trapezoid (American definition) is that two sides are parallel.
Side a and side c are the parallel sides and are called bases.
The non-parallel sides (side b and side d) are called legs.
Lines AC and BD are the diagonals.
The median is perpendicular to the height and bisects lines AB and CD.
∠ A plus ∠ B = 180° ∠ C plus ∠ D = 180°
Trapezoid Area = ½ • (sum of the parallel sides) • height
height² = [(a +b -c +d) • (-a +b +c +d) • (a -b -c +d) • (a +b -c -d)] ÷ (4 • (a -c)²)
Two special cases of trapezoid are worth mentioning.
The legs and diagonals of an isosceles trapezoid are equal.
AB = CD and AC = BD
Both pairs of base angles are equal
∠ A = ∠ D and ∠ B = ∠ C
The right trapezoid has two right angles.
Kites
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∠ A and ∠ D are vertex angles
∠ B = ∠ C and are the non-vertex angles
Lines AD and BC are diagonals and always meet at right angles.
Diagonal AD is the axis of symmetry and bisects diagonal BC, bisects ∠ A and ∠ D, and bisects the kite into two congruent, triangles. (△ ABD and △ ACD)
Diagonal BC bisects the kite into two isosceles triangles. (△ ABC and △ BCD)
Side AB = side AC, side BD = side CD and Line OB = Line OC
Rhombuses
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• All four sides are equal (Side AB = BD = DC = CA)
• Diagonals meet at right angles
• Diagonals bisect each other
• Diagonals bisect the vertex angles ∠ A ∠ B ∠ C and ∠ D
• Both pairs of opposite angles are equal
∠ A = ∠ D ∠ C = ∠ B
• Adjacent angles are supplementary (they sum to 180°)
∠ A + ∠ B = ∠ B + ∠ D = ∠ D + ∠ C = ∠ C + ∠ A = 180°
• Rhombus Altitude = side • sine (either angle) = (AD • CB) ÷ (2 • side)
• Rhombus Area = (AD × CB) ÷ 2 = side • altitude = side² • sine (either angle)
• Long Diagonal AD = Side Length • Square Root [ 2 + 2 • cos(A) ]
• Short Diagonal BC = Side Length • Square Root [ 2 + 2 • cos(B) ]
• 4 • Side² = Long Diagonal² + Short Diagonal²
Rectangles
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• Opposite sides are parallel and equal
• All 4 angles are right angles
• Diagonals bisect each other and are equal
• Rectangle Area = length × width
• Perimeter = (2 × length) + (2 × width)
Squares
Click here for a rectangle and square calculator.
• All 4 sides are equal
• All 4 angles are right angles
• Diagonals bisect each other at right angles and are equal
• Perimeter = 4 × side length
• Area = (side length)2
Quadrilateral Properties
D I A G O N A L S | Isosceles Trapezoid |
Kite | Parallel ogram |
Rhombus | Rectangle | Square |
Diagonals Bisect Each Other | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | ||
Diagonals Are Equal | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | |||
Diagonals Meet At Right Angles | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | |||
P A R A L L E L S I D E S | Isosceles Trapezoid |
Kite | Parallel ogram |
Rhombus | Rectangle | Square |
Only 2 Sides Are Parallel | Y E S | |||||
No Sides Are Parallel | Y E S | |||||
Both Pairs of Opposite Sides Are Parallel | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | ||
E Q U A L S I D E S | Isosceles Trapezoid |
Kite | Parallel ogram |
Rhombus | Rectangle | Square |
Only 2 Sides Are Equal | Y E S | |||||
Both Pair of Adjacent Sides Are Equal But No Opposite Sides Are Equal |
Y E S | |||||
Both Pair of Opposite Sides Are Equal | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | Y E S | ||
All Four Sides Are Equal | Y E S | Y E S | ||||
A N G L E S | Isosceles Trapezoid |
Kite | Parallel ogram |
Rhombus | Rectangle | Square |
Both Pairs of Base Angles Are Equal | Y E S | |||||
Non-Vertex Angles Are Equal | Y E S | |||||
Only Opposite Angle Pairs Are Equal | Y E S | Y E S | ||||
All Four Angles Are Right Angles | Y E S | Y E S | ||||
O T H E R | Isosceles Trapezoid |
Kite | Parallel ogram |
Rhombus | Rectangle | Square |
Cyclic Quadrilateral | Y E S | YES | YES | |||
Tangential Quadrilateral | YES | YES | YES |
A circle can be circumscribed around a cyclic quadrilateral and its opposite angles add up to 180°
A circle can be inscribed inside a tangential quadrilateral.