Ah, what a happy little question! The shape you're thinking of is a scalene triangle. It doesn't have any lines of symmetry, but it does have rotational symmetry of order 4, which means it looks the same after being rotated 90 degrees four times. Isn't that just lovely?
An isosceles triangle.* * * * *An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry, while an isosceles triangle has only one, and any other triangle (non-isosceles right triangle, or scalene triangle) has zero.
That depends on what type of triangle it is because an equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry whereas an isosceles triangle has only 1 line of symmetry and any other triangles have no lines of symmetry.
Irregular shapes have NO lines of symmetry and all the sides are not the same. A regular shape WILL have lines of symmetry and all the sides are the same. * * * * * Wrong! A kite, for example, is an irregular but it has reflective symmetry. A parallelogram is an irregular quadrilateral but has rotational symmetry.
Any isosceles triangle that is not also equilateral has exactly one line of symmetry.
It depends on what kind of triangle. A scalene triangle (no equal sides or angles) would not have any lines of symmetry. An isosceles triangle would have 1 line of symmetry, and an equilateral triangle would have 3 lines of symmetry.
Any triangle that is not isosceles or equilateral. An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry, while an isosceles triangle has only one, and any other triangle (non-isosceles right triangle, or scalene triangle) has zero.
Ah, what a happy little question! The shape you're thinking of is a scalene triangle. It doesn't have any lines of symmetry, but it does have rotational symmetry of order 4, which means it looks the same after being rotated 90 degrees four times. Isn't that just lovely?
It depends what type of triange it is. If it is an equilateral triangle, you can draw 3 lines of symmetry If it is an isosceles triangle, you can draw 1 line of symmetry If it is a scalene triangle, you cannot draw any lines of symmetry
YES!!! An equilateral triangle has three lines of symmetry. They are drawn from any one corner to the opposite base. They should all intersect at the centre of the triangle. By comparison, an Isosceles triangle has only one line of symmetry. From the one unequal angle to the opposite side. Right angled, and scalene triangles do not have lines of symmetry.
An isosceles triangle.* * * * *An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry, while an isosceles triangle has only one, and any other triangle (non-isosceles right triangle, or scalene triangle) has zero.
It depends what type of triangle it is. If it is a scalene triangle, ie. a triangle with three different length sides and angles, then it won't have any lines of symmetry. If it's an iscosoles triangle, ie. a triangle with two sides and angles of equal length, it has one line of symmetry, but if it's an equalateral triangle, ie. a triangle with all sides and angles the same, then it has three lines of symmetry.
that depends on the triangle. if the triangle has no two sides that are the same length, then it is called a scalene triangle and it has no lines of symmetry. if the triangle has two sides that are the same length, the triangle has one line of symmetry, starting at the angle where the two same length sides meet, and ending at the center of the opposite side. if all three sides are the same length, the triangle has three lines of symmetry, between any angle an the center of the opposite side.
That depends on what type of triangle it is because an equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry whereas an isosceles triangle has only 1 line of symmetry and any other triangles have no lines of symmetry.
No.
it depends on the triangle
First of all, your grammar is terrible. The question should be "Does a triangle have 2 lines of symmetry and 2 lines of rotational symmetry? and the answer is no. A triangle can not have 2 lines of rotational symmetry, because you only rotate the image, you do not use any lines.