No.
no, only equilateral triangles have 3 lines of symmetry
no they do not they have to be equal so that proves there is NO lines of symmetry * * * * * It depends on the triangle. Equilateral triangles have 3 lines of symmetry, Isosceles triangles have 1 and all other triangles have none.
Equilateral triangles have rotational symmetry.
Maybe yes or no
no
It depends on the type of triangle: -- scalene triangles have three sides of different length, and no lines of symmetry -- isoceles triangles have one line of symmetry that includes the apex -- equilateral triangles have three lines of symmetry, all bisectors through a vertex
All the at least 1 line of symmetry are called: squares rectangles hexagons octagons triangles semicircles kites parallelograms isosceles triangles equilateral triangles Good Luck Finding an Answer! :)
Only if they are in the form of an isosceles or an equilateral triangle.
A scalene triangle. Though it's usually defined as having three sides of different lengths, this is an equivalent definition: all equilateral triangles have three lines of symmetry, and all isosceles triangles have one (no triangle has two lines of symmetry).
Some triangles do have a line of symmetry. Equilateral and Isosceles triangles have a line of symmetry. If you can fold a triangle into two equal halves, the folding line is a line symmetry.
Equilateral triangles have rotational symmetry.
triangles have 0 rotational symmetry