The relationship is one of identity. The number of lines of symmetry for any object, are always identically equal to the number of lines of symmetry for that same object.The relationship is one of identity. The number of lines of symmetry for any object, are always identically equal to the number of lines of symmetry for that same object.The relationship is one of identity. The number of lines of symmetry for any object, are always identically equal to the number of lines of symmetry for that same object.The relationship is one of identity. The number of lines of symmetry for any object, are always identically equal to the number of lines of symmetry for that same object.
Sphere
FOUR
an equilateral triangle
a square or a circle
The line of symmetry is the reflection of an object. The Letter F does not have a line of symmetry.
None. For a 3-dimensional object, a line of symmetry implies rotational symmetry and an aircraft has no line of rotational symmetry.
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.
2 lines of symmetry
A nephroid has 2 lines of symmetry.
it has five lines of symmetry
Equilateral Triangles (3 lines of symmetry)Rectangles (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Squares (4 lines of symmetry)Rhombuses (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Any regular polygon (at least 5 lines of symmetry)