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 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
A rectangle.