A kite does not have rotational symmetry.
A kite, for example.
A kite or an equilateral trapezium.
A kite, An arrowhead, an isosceles trapezium are three possibilities.
Four, if the quadrilateral is a square, but if it is a rectangle it only has two and if it is an irregular quadrilateral it most probably only has one. So a rectangle, a rhombus, and a parallelogram have two, orders of rotational symetry but a kite and a trapezium although quadrilaterals (4sides) only have one.
A kite does not have rotational symmetry.
A kite, for example.A kite, for example.A kite, for example.A kite, for example.
1
A kite has only one line of rotational symmetry, as it is only the same if it is tilted once. (back to its normal position).
A kite, for example.
A kite or an equilateral trapezium.
A Parallelogram, a Diamond and a rhombus all have rotational symetry of two. Others Kite 1 Trapezium 1 Square 4
Answer No. If the shape has rotational symmetry, then it should be able to match itself when rotated a certain number of degrees that IS NOT 360 degrees. Why? Well, if we stop and think about it, all shapes can match themselves when being rotated 360 degrees (a full circle.) If 360 degrees was valid and qualified for rotational symmetry, then any shape would have rotational symmetry. Then this classification of rotational symmetry would have no real conclusion. The only way a kite can match itself when rotating is if you rotate it 360 degrees. Therefore, it does not have rotational symmetry.
Yes. a kite is one of them
A kite, An arrowhead, an isosceles trapezium are three possibilities.
yes it has 5. now don't worry cas i got straight As for my GCSE results. ta Lots of love
A trapezium, a kite, an arrowhead, a quadrilateral with 4 different sides. In fact, anything other than a parallelogram (and its special cases).