Yes.
A rectangle has two lines of symmetry, the lines that connect the midpoints of the parallel sides of a rectangle are lines of symmetry of the rectangle.
A rectangle has two lines of symmetry
A rectangle has two lines of symmetry (the bisection of the length and width).
Technically, a square is a rectangle with four lines of symmetry. A non-square rectangle has exactly two lines of symmetry: the vertical and the horizontal.
They both have the same amount of lines of symmetry. * * * * * Not true. A square has four lines of symmetry, a rectangle only two.
A rectangle is one of them
There are only two lines of symmetry. Divide either of the two opposite sides of the rectangle in half and join these two points.
No, a non-square rectangle has two: the horizontal and the vertical. A square has four lines of symmetry: the horizontal, the vertical, and two diagonal lines.
A non-square rectangle has two lines of symmetry. One line of symmetry runs vertically down the center, dividing the rectangle into two equal halves, while the other runs horizontally across the center. These lines reflect the rectangle's uniform width and length, maintaining symmetry. A square rectangle, by contrast, has four lines of symmetry.
A four-sided quadrilateral having two lines of symmetry is a rectangle
A parallelagram can be a square, which has four lines of symmetry or a rectangle which has two lines of symmetry but the generic parallelagram has zero lines of symmetry
Just two