The best answer is a rectangle
The only known shapes with two lines of symmetry are rhombus and rectangles. These shapes are found by the test of line of symmetry of certain shapes.Sketch a rectangle, which has two pair of congruent and parallel lines and all right angles. Indicate the lines of symmetry. They should pass through each opposite midpoint of the segments of the rectangles.Sketch a rhombus, the shape that has all congruent sides, but have two pairs of congruent angles, which are different from another. Indicate the lines of symmetry. They should pass through both opposite vertices of the rhombus.
The number 8 has only 2 lines of symmetry; Vertical and Horizontal.
An equilateral triangle will have three lines of symmetry. Others will have one (or none). There is no triangle with only two.
A square has 4 lines of symmetry whereas a rectangle has only 2 lines of symmetry.
Shapes that only have two lines of symmetry:SquareRectangleParallelogram
no because other shapes have more such as a square
The best answer is a rectangle
The only known shapes with two lines of symmetry are rhombus and rectangles. These shapes are found by the test of line of symmetry of certain shapes.Sketch a rectangle, which has two pair of congruent and parallel lines and all right angles. Indicate the lines of symmetry. They should pass through each opposite midpoint of the segments of the rectangles.Sketch a rhombus, the shape that has all congruent sides, but have two pairs of congruent angles, which are different from another. Indicate the lines of symmetry. They should pass through both opposite vertices of the rhombus.
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.
Only equilateral triangles and some irregular polygons of (3n) sides have 3 lines of symmetry. A regular polygon with n sides (or vertices) has n lines of symmetry. If n is even, there are n/2 lines of symmetry from vertex to opposite vertex and another n/2 from the middle of a side to the middle of the opposite side. If n is odd, there are n lines of symmetry from vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.
Circles and Ovals DO have lines of symmetry: a circle has an infinite number of them (each is a diameter of the circle) and an oval (ellipse) has two (one along the major axis, one along the minor axis). Shapes which have no lines of symmetry are irregular ones, eg scalene triangles, along with most parallelograms (ie parallelograms which are not rhombuses) and non-isosceles trapezia. Some irregular shapes can have lines of symmetry, eg irregular octagons can have 1, 2 or 4 lines of symmetry as well as no lines of symmetry, unlike a regular octagon which [always] has 8 lines of symmetry.
Rhombus ,trapezium * * * * * Wrong. A rhombus is symmetric about its diagonals.
The number 8 has only 2 lines of symmetry; Vertical and Horizontal.
2 lines of symmetry
Squares, which are parallelograms, have four lines of symmetry. Rectangles have only two. Rhombi have two lines of symmetry. Generic parallelograms don't have any lines of symmetry.None normally unless it is in the shape of a rectangle in which case it will have 2 lines of symmetry
No it has only 2