symmetry in rectangle?
Technically, a square is a rectangle with four lines of symmetry. A non-square rectangle has exactly two lines of symmetry: the vertical and the horizontal.
All squares are rectangle, but not all rectangles are square. The expected answer is "a square" ... A square has 4 lines of symmetry. A rectangle that is not a square has 2 lines of symmetry. However, the question is ambiguous. Since a square is a rectangle you can say that some rectangles have 4 lines of symmetry. A better question is, "Which has more lines of symmetry; a square, or a rectangle that is not a square?"
Only when the rectangle is a square.
The best answer is a rectangle
symmetry in rectangle?
No but a rectangle does have 2 lines of symmetry
No A rectangle has rotational symmetry as well
A rectangle has two lines of symmetry, the lines that connect the midpoints of the parallel sides of a rectangle are lines of symmetry of the rectangle.
a rectangle has 4 lines of symmetry
A rectangle has 2 axes of symmetry.
a rectangle has 2 axes of symmetry
A rectangle has 2 lines of symmetry
A rectangle has two lines of symmetry
A rectangle has two lines of symmetry (the bisection of the length and width).
A rectangle has two axes of symmetry and has rotational symmetry of order 2.
A rectangle has 2 lines of symmetry whereas a square has 4 lines of symmetry