Suggested by a phrase in a post elsewhere from Martin, to whom thanks:
"ladies" frame twin-lateral bike
I like
parallelogram because it doesn't imply that
twin-laterals are parallel to the ground. Mind you, if we're about to split hairs (or frames),
trapezoidal frame would be even better because it includes twin rails that aren't parallel and also the fact that the head tube and the seat tube are differentially angled where they close the ends of the whatever-you-call-them rails and therefore of different lengths.
There's also
trapeze, which I'm assured (from the Continent) was once a common descriptor also in use in Britain. But I'm particularly keen that my bike shouldn't fly...
You might enjoy this for the section about what the name mixte should be reserved for (though American readers had better give it a miss to save their blood pressure):
https://groups.google.com/g/rec.bicycles.tech/c/LqY0UpZTIP0/m/L-2d5vPiSW4JA
mixte is a relatively low stepover frame with two thin rails running from the head tube, passing either side of the seat tube, all the way to the rear dropouts so that in profile the bike looks like it has three stays at the back rather than the usual two.
Andrew Muzi, a notable LBS near Mickeg, uses
open frame for any frame without a top tube that isn't for ladies.
The frame that looks like a U to provide an ultra-low stepover is called a
wave.
What other frames do you know? What were the names of the unique low stepover frames Thorn offered?