yes
A circle. It has infinitely many.
A heart. Triangles can have more than one depending on the type.
A parallelogram.
A scalene triangle has only line symmetry and no rotational symmetry of order more than 1. In a scalene triangle, all sides and angles are different, preventing it from having any rotational symmetry. It may have at most one line of symmetry if it has a specific arrangement or reflection, but generally, it lacks line symmetry entirely.
A circle.
A circle. It has infinitely many.
A heart. Triangles can have more than one depending on the type.
Oh, dude, line symmetry is when you can fold a shape in half and both sides match up perfectly, like a beautiful butterfly. Point symmetry is basically when a shape looks the same even after you give it a little spin, like a merry-go-round that never gets dizzy. So, like, line symmetry is all about folding, and point symmetry is more about twirling.
not possible
A parallelogram.
It will have 3 lines of symmetry if its an equilateral triangle and only 1 line of symmetry if its an isosceles triangle.
A scalene triangle has only line symmetry and no rotational symmetry of order more than 1. In a scalene triangle, all sides and angles are different, preventing it from having any rotational symmetry. It may have at most one line of symmetry if it has a specific arrangement or reflection, but generally, it lacks line symmetry entirely.
Many shapes have more than one line of symmetry. These include a rectangle, equilateral triangle, and a square. While a rectangle has two lines of symmetry, an equilateral triangle has three.
A circle.
Star fish.
Square, circle...
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.