It will be a line of symmetry creating a 'mirror image'
An isosceles trapezoid only has 1 pair of congruent sides. It is drawn like this:
Yes.
a object that has a line horizontally drawn across the figure
Animals with radial symmetry have body parts arranged around a central point. Any line drawn from one side through the center to the opposite side will divide the animal into two symmetrical halves.
A square has all sides congruent. SIDE A, B, C and D would be congruent in size to one another, and the angles would also be equal to one another. However, most any polygon can be drawn with all sides and angles equal. For instance, an equilateral triangle has all sides and all angles equal, and that is the definition of a polygon. Polygons with more sides are described as "regular" e.g., a stop sign or an equilateral octagon is also a shape that has all sides congruent. A rectangle, however, would not, since only two sides would be congruent to one another.
An angle bisector.
You're talking about a line of symmetry. But if the sections aremirror images of each other, then they're not congruent.
True.
Correct
An isosceles trapezoid only has 1 pair of congruent sides. It is drawn like this:
a figure that has a line drawn horizontally across the figure
Yes.
Drawing two tiny parallel lines over the segment will indicate that it is a congruent segment. The little arc symbol can also be drawn over the segment or the angles.
No
yes
A cord that crosses the center of a circle is a diameter, which divides the circle into two equal halves. It is a line segment, and it is the longest cord that can be drawn within a circle.However, if the segment begins at the center rather than crosses through it, and has the other endpoint on the circumference of the circle, it is not a cord, but is a radius of that circle.
circle