yes
2
A circle, square, oval, hemisphere, Equilateral triangle, Isosceles Triangle
Yes. Any even sided figure will have a rotational symmetry. Yes. If it is a regular shape such as a square, hexagon or octagon (equilateral and equiangular) then the rotational symmetry is the same as the number of sides. Rotational symmetry is basically if the shape is rotated, is it exactly the same as it was before. A hexagon can be rotated 6 times and still be the same without actually being in the the same postition, so a hexagon has a rotational symmetry of 6.
Oh, dude, a regular hexagon has six sides, so it has six lines of symmetry. Each line of symmetry represents a different way you can rotate the hexagon and have it look the same. So, the order of rotational symmetry for a regular hexagon is 6. Like, it's symmetry, but make it hexagonal.
Oh, dude, an oval has an infinite number of lines of symmetry, so technically it has infinite rotational symmetry. But like, who's really gonna sit there and rotate an oval forever just to prove a point, right? So, yeah, infinite rotational symmetry for the win!
Yes
yes it has the same number of lines of symmetry
They both have the same amount of lines of symmetry. * * * * * Not true. A square has four lines of symmetry, a rectangle only two.
A square has four; a pentagon has five.
Yes, as for example a square has 4 lines of symmetry
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.
All regular octagons have the same number of lines of symmetry, but octagons with unequal sides would have fewer lines of symmetry.
No, a polygon can have fewer lines of symmetry.
Rotational symmetry refers to symmetry of the figure when it is rotated about a single point in the same plane. Lines of symmetry apply to reflections. You do not have lines of rotational symmetry.
They would have the same
no they dont
It will have six lines of symmetry.