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A figure can be rotated through any angle of your choice.
It is called a rotation
In geometry, a rotation refers to the movement of a figure around a fixed point, called the center of rotation. The figure remains the same shape and size, but it changes its position, orientation, or both. A rotation can be either clockwise or counterclockwise, and is measured in degrees.
Rotation preserves shape - therefore the angle before the rotation equals the angle after the rotation.
A square.
If you can rotate (or turn) a figure around a center point by fewer than 360° and the figure appears unchanged, then the figure has rotation symmetry. The point around which you rotate is called the center of rotation, and the smallest angle you need to turn is called the angle of rotation. This figure has rotation symmetry of 72°, and the center of rotation is the center of the figure:
A figure can be rotated through any angle of your choice.
It is called a rotation
The rotation of the earth around the sun and the angle of the rotation of the earth itself.
The least angle at which the figure may be rotated to coincide with itself is the angle of symmetry.
In geometry, a rotation refers to the movement of a figure around a fixed point, called the center of rotation. The figure remains the same shape and size, but it changes its position, orientation, or both. A rotation can be either clockwise or counterclockwise, and is measured in degrees.
a full circle=360 degrees
A rotation.
It is 36k degrees where k is an integer.
Rotation preserves shape - therefore the angle before the rotation equals the angle after the rotation.
The centre of rotation, the angle of rotation and, unless the angle is 180 degrees, the direction of rotation.
A square.