The answer will depend on the shape of the paper that you start with.
It means 4 lines of symmetry as for example a square has 4 lines of symmetry
They are called fold lines or perforated lines. They indicate where the paper should be folded or torn.
A regular hexagon has six lines of symmetry. Lines of symmetry are imaginary lines where you can fold a figure or image and both halves are identical matches.
Fold (or pretend to fold) an object in half in different ways, and if the edges and corners match exactly up to each other, that is a line of symmetry. If you want to count all the lines of symmetry, use the method above but tally the amount of lines of symmetry you count.
Something that you can fold and its equal....
To see this more clearly, take a piece of paper that is rectangular in shape and fold in half from top to bottom. When you unfold you will see the crease through the middle of the paper and notice that both halves are symmetrical, meaning mirror images of each other, and identical in size and shape. Now, fold the paper in half again from left to right. When you unfold you will see a second crease, forming a cross over the first. The two creases represent the two lines of symmetry. Note: Technically a square is also a rectangle, but has 4 lines of symmetry since you can also divide a square into symmetrical shapes from the corners, or on the diagonal.
You can't fold a piece of paper 50 times
Some people say a parallelogram does have a line of symmetry because it looks like a rhombus but the truth is that a parallelogram does not have a line of symmetry because if you take paper and fold it in any way in a shape of a parallelogram so a parallelogram does not have a line of symmetry
Yes, because if you take a clover and fold it it will fold evenly like paper.
If you canfold something in half and the two sides are identical then the fold is a line of symmetry. A circle has an infinite lines of symmetry because you can fold it in infinite places and it will always be the same. An oval has two - you can fold it the long way or the short way.
fold hotdog style then into 3rds
You can flip the traced version along various lines. If the flipped shape matches the original then the that is a line of symmetry. Alternatively, if you can find a fold such that the two halves of the tracing match then the fold line is a line of symmetry.