The Quadrilateral reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Quadrilateral

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In geometry, a quadrilateral is a polygon with four sides and four vertices.

Classifications

Quadrilaterals, and polygons in general, are broadly divided into two groups: convex and concave polygons. (A quadrilaterial, like a general polygon can be self-intersecting, for example, an hour-glass figure, and then would be classified as complex and be neither convex nor concave)

Convex quadrilaterals are further classified as follows:

image:quadrilateral.png

Taxonomic classification

The taxonomic classification of quadrillaterals is illustrated by the following graph:

Lower forms are special cases of higher forms.

                         Polygon
                            |
                      Quadrilaterial
                        /       \\
                     simple     complex
                      /  \\
                 convex  concave 
                   /          
           Trapezium/oid [Am/Eng]
            /        \\
           /          \\
          /         Trapezoid/ium [Am/Eng]
         /            /     \\
        Kite         /       \\
         \\    Parallelogram  Isosceles Trapezoid/ium [Am/Eng]
          \\    /     \\       /
           \\  /       \\     /
          Rhombus   Rectangle
             \\        /
              \\      /
               Square

This graph shows some of the shapes are special cases of more general shapes, with all the specific shapes also being either a trapezium or a trapezoid:
Square: Rectangle, rhombus, kite, parallelogram, isosceles trapezium/oid.
Rectangle: Parallelogram, isosceles trapezium/oid.
Rhombus: Kite, parallelogram.


Quadrilateral is also the name of a group of fortresses in Italy and of the southern part of Dobrudja, ceded by Romania to Bulgaria in the opening month of World War II (see Romania during World War II).