Shawndra is correct
She made two statements, and both are true:
1. It is not possible to draw a trapezoid that is a
rectangle.
This is true because a trapezoid<span> is a quadrilateral that has exactly one pair of
parallel sides, whereas a rectangle is a parallelogram (i.e. it has two
pairs of parallel sides)</span>
2. It is possible to draw a square that is a rectangle.
This is true because a rectangle refers to any parallelogram
with right angles. A square is also a parallelogram (has two pairs of opposite
sides) with right angles. In fact, all squares are rectangles; only that they
are a special kind of rectangle, where all the sides are equal in length.
(–2) + 6 + 1 = 1 + 6 + (–2) is B.Commutative Property
If the drawing of your octagon (or whatever) has been separated into triangles, and one triangle's area<span> is labeled, then you do not need to know the apothem. Just take the </span>area<span> of that one triangle, and multiply by the number of sides in the original </span>polygon<span>.</span>
1. 2n > 17
n > 7
2. n/5 ≥ 11
n ≥ 55
3. -3y ≤ -18
y ≥ 6
If these are right, please leave a thanks and a rating.