Rectangles and Rhombuses (if they are not also a square. Squares have 4 lines of symmetry.)
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.
H
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
The quadrilaterals that always have both line symmetry and rotational symmetry are squares and rectangles. Squares have four lines of symmetry and rotational symmetry of order 4, while rectangles have two lines of symmetry and rotational symmetry of order 2. Other quadrilaterals, like rhombuses and parallelograms, may have one type of symmetry but not both. Thus, squares and rectangles are the only quadrilaterals that consistently possess both symmetries.
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
rectangles
No, it has 1.
Rectangle