The answer will depend on what you mean by "this type".
Rotational Symmetry, Traversal Symmetry, -Insert third type here-
three
The rectory, the supplementary, and the general branches
One type of symmetry is rotation. The second type of symmetry is translation. The third type of symmetry is reflection.
An isosceles triangle has two equal sides and one line of symmetry
It depends on which type of cuboid we are talking about. If it is a CUBE (a special type of cuboid), then it has nine planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with length, width and height all different, then it has three planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with two equal measurements (say width and length), then it has five planes of symmetry.
line symmetry, rotational symmetry, mirror symmetry &liner symmetry
The three types of symmetry are bilateral symmetry, radial symmetry, and asymmetry. Bilateral symmetry is when an organism can be divided into mirror-image halves along a single plane, while radial symmetry allows for multiple symmetrical planes around a central axis. Humans exhibit bilateral symmetry, as our body can be divided into left and right halves that are mirror images of each other.
Bilateral Symmetry
The word "symmetry" has three syllables.
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
Bilateral symmetry