Yes. Any equilateral shape can have both rotational and line symmetry.
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∙ 14y agoA semicircle.
A line segment would have rotational symmetry.
The letters S, N, Z, for example.
A triangle........I think
Parrallelogram (it has rotational symmetry but no lines of symmetry)
circle
A semicircle.
A line segment would have rotational symmetry.
How about an isosceles trapezoid
The letters S, N, Z, for example.
A triangle........I think
Parrallelogram (it has rotational symmetry but no lines of symmetry)
The letters H and Z have both line symmetry and rotational symmetry
A shape does NOT need to have line symmetry in order to have rotational symmetry.For example, the letters N, Z and S can be rotated 180° to show symmetry, but none of these show line symmetry.When the folded part Line of Symmetry. Here I have folded a rectangle one way, and it didn't work.
It has line symmetry (straight down the center) but not rotational symmetry.
A line has rotational symmetry of order 2.
no shape does! * * * * * Not true. A parallelogram has rotational symmetry of order 2, but no lines of symmetry.