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trapezoide

Trapezoide, known in English as trapezoid (trapezium in some varieties), is a quadrilateral defined by having a single pair of parallel sides. The parallel sides are called bases, while the non-parallel sides are called legs. The distance between the bases is the height.

The area of a trapezoide is given by the formula A = (b1 + b2) / 2 × h, where

In a trapezoide, the base angles adjacent to each base are supplementary. When the legs are equal

Some definitions treat trapezoide as any quadrilateral with at least one pair of parallel sides, in which

Applications of trapezoide occur in architecture, design, and surveying, where its properties help model ramps, roof

b1
and
b2
are
the
lengths
of
the
bases
and
h
is
the
height.
The
bases
are
parallel,
and
the
height
is
measured
perpendicular
to
them.
The
sum
of
the
interior
angles
on
each
leg
is
180
degrees.
in
length,
the
trapezoide
is
called
isosceles,
and
its
diagonals
are
equal
in
length.
A
right
trapezoide
has
two
right
angles,
typically
with
one
leg
perpendicular
to
the
bases.
The
diagonals
of
a
trapezoide
generally
have
different
lengths,
except
in
special
symmetric
cases.
case
parallelograms
and
rectangles
may
be
included.
In
stricter
definitions,
a
trapezoide
has
exactly
one
pair
of
parallel
sides,
excluding
parallelograms.
structures,
and
cross-sections.
It
also
appears
in
various
geometric
problems
and
theorems,
illustrating
relationships
between
bases,
legs,
heights,
and
diagonals.