Yes a pentagon does have reflection symmetry
No, it has seven.
A regular pentagon has five lines of symmetry, but a specific type of pentagon known as an irregular pentagon can have only two lines of symmetry. An example would be a pentagon where two sides are equal in length, and the angles opposite these sides are equal, creating reflectional symmetry across those two lines. However, the specific arrangement would affect the overall symmetry, so not all irregular pentagons will have exactly two lines of symmetry.
No, it's not true that only regular polygons with an even number of sides are symmetrical. Regular polygons, regardless of whether they have an even or odd number of sides, are symmetrical. They possess rotational symmetry and reflectional symmetry; for example, a regular triangle (3 sides) and a regular pentagon (5 sides) both exhibit symmetry.
Reflection symmetry, reflectional symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, mirror-image symmetry, or bilateral symmetry is symmetry with respect to reflection
yes it does put the mirror in the middle of the midpoint and vertex
It has both because it has 5 lines of symmetry and rotational symmetry to the order of 5
It has reflectional symmetry It has five lines of symmetry It is symmetrical
A pentagon does have reflective symmetry.
Yes it does. A regular hexagon will have both rotational and reflectional symmetry about its centre.
true
No, it has seven.
A regular pentagon has five lines of symmetry, but a specific type of pentagon known as an irregular pentagon can have only two lines of symmetry. An example would be a pentagon where two sides are equal in length, and the angles opposite these sides are equal, creating reflectional symmetry across those two lines. However, the specific arrangement would affect the overall symmetry, so not all irregular pentagons will have exactly two lines of symmetry.
Yes, a regular pentagon has rotational symmetry.
A regular pentagon has five axes of symmetry.
No, it's not true that only regular polygons with an even number of sides are symmetrical. Regular polygons, regardless of whether they have an even or odd number of sides, are symmetrical. They possess rotational symmetry and reflectional symmetry; for example, a regular triangle (3 sides) and a regular pentagon (5 sides) both exhibit symmetry.
There are 5 lines of symmetry in a regular pentagon but a less amount in a irregular Pentagon
Reflection symmetry, reflectional symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, mirror-image symmetry, or bilateral symmetry is symmetry with respect to reflection