yes , by making two rectangles of dimensions
4 by 1.5
They have NO lines of symmetry
Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)
Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)
square and rectangles are technicality squares
Yes: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ----------------- . . | . . . . . . . . . . . | . . | . # . . . . . # . | . . | . # . . . . . # . | . . | . # . . . . . # . | . . | . # . . . . . # . | . . | . . . . . . . . . . . | . . ----------------- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The #s represent two shaded rectangles in the line marked square (sorry for the wiggly line). The square has two lines of symmetry: running centre top to centre bottom & centre left to centre right.
4:2 along the diagonals2 from the mid points of opposite sides
They have NO lines of symmetry
1
All squares are rectangle, but not all rectangles are square. The expected answer is "a square" ... A square has 4 lines of symmetry. A rectangle that is not a square has 2 lines of symmetry. However, the question is ambiguous. Since a square is a rectangle you can say that some rectangles have 4 lines of symmetry. A better question is, "Which has more lines of symmetry; a square, or a rectangle that is not a square?"
Rectangles do not have congruent lines. A square can always be called a rectangle. But a rectangle can't always be a square.
Ellipses and non-square rectangles have two lines of symmetry.
Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)
Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)
Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square. Squares have 4 lines of symmetry.)
Parallelogram (if it is a rectangle), Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)
100 A rectangle is formed by 2 horizontal lines and 2 vertical lines. There are 5 horizontal and 5 vertical lines so the number of rectangles is 5C2 * 5C2 = 10 * 10 = 100
Draw 2 parallel lines which will result in 3 equal rectangles within the same square.