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.
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yes they can. They can be the bottom+top or the left+right.
2 lines OF SYMMETRY
Lines of symmetry are 2 dimensional. Planes of symmetry are 3D.
There are two quadrilaterals with 2 lines of symmetry. A rhombus and a rectangle (if they are not also a square)
A rectangle has exactly 2 lines of symmetry
There are 7 types of quadrilaterals: Kite, Trapezoid, Isosceles Trapezoid, Parallelogram, Rectangle, Rhombus, and Square.Quadrilaterals with 2 lines of symmetry:Rectangles (if they are not also a square)Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)Squares have 4 lines of symmetry.
quadrangle with exactly 2 lines of summetry
Parallelogram (if it is a rectangle), Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square)
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.
An equilateral triangle contains at least 2 lines of symmetry (it actually contains 3 lines of symmetry). An equilateral triangle is also radially symmetric.If the question is "Is there a triangle with exactly 2 lines lines of symmetry?", the answer is no.
rectangle
No, it has 1.
rectangles
Rectangle
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