A shape with 7 sides.
Yes. a kite is one of them
Any shape with 3 or more sides.
A kite, and various options amongst polygons with 5 or more sides.
A square always has, and any polygon with more than four sides can have.
A symmetrical shape is said to have line symmetry. A shape that has line symmetry can have one or more lines of symmetry
None.All shapes were at least 3 sides or more.
Isosceles triangle, kite. -improvement: an isosceles triangle actually has three lines of symmetry, equal to the number of sides. It is easy to design irregular polygons with an odd number of sides that have just one line of symmetry. A parabola. Many more functions that are more complex - cardioid, for example.
A line of symmetry is a line through a shape. It shows that on either side of this line that the picture is exactly the same. There can be more than one line of symmetry in a shape.They are 'mirror images' when a shapes are divided by a lines of symmetry.
Depending on the triangle, there can be 0, 1, or three lines of symmetry. A scalene triangle (all sides of different lengths) will have no lines of symmetry, an isosceles triangle (exactly two sides of the same length) will have one line of symmetry, and an equilateral triangle (all three sides of the same length) will have three lines of symmetry.
A symmetrical shape. There are many different shapes that have one or more lines of symmetry and there is no other name associated with them as a group.
Many shapes have more than one line of symmetry. These include a rectangle, equilateral triangle, and a square. While a rectangle has two lines of symmetry, an equilateral triangle has three.
Oh, dude, line symmetry is when you can fold a shape in half and both sides match up perfectly, like a beautiful butterfly. Point symmetry is basically when a shape looks the same even after you give it a little spin, like a merry-go-round that never gets dizzy. So, like, line symmetry is all about folding, and point symmetry is more about twirling.
It has 5 sides It has 5 angles The sum of the interior angles is 540° All angles are not the same measure The sides may, or may not, all be the same length. It will not have line symmetry of 5 It has no rotational symmetry (called rotational symmetry of 1 when I was at school).
Squares, circles, rectangles, and some triangles have more than 1 line of symmetry.
A circle (infinitely many lines of symmetry), ellipse, rectangle, and all regular polygons.
Any regular polygon has 3 (or more) lines of symmetry.