yes actually I even found out when I took a pic and it was symmetry
4 line of symmetry
ThisIsAPieceOfCrap
Radial symmetry - jellyfish, starfish.Bilateral symmetry - horse, human
Bilateral.
bilateral symmetry
yes humans are bilateral symmetry
I don't think a human foot has any lines of symmetry. I don't know about other species.
None or one.
Radial symmetry is a particular kind of symmetry in which an object takes on a similar form in any direction outward from the center (like a circle, which is the most perfect radially symmetrical form). Another form of symmetry is bilateral symmetry, meaning that is a two sided symmetry, in which a left side resembles a right side; this is the kind that human bodies have. In comparison, starfish have radial symmetry.
there is no such thing as barnacle symmetry the 4 types of symmetry are: asymmetrical (no symmetry), radial (has a center "line" where if cut strait down that "line" any way it will be symmetrical), spherical (as long as the cut is strait and goes threw the center "point" it will be symmetical), and bilateral (it can only be cut once for it to be symmetrical).
Humans, like all mammals and other vertebrates, have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side.
A giraffes symmetry is the same as a human's, bilateral symmetry. drawing a line down the one plane through the central axis produces two halves that are mirror images of each other.