A trapezoid has no rotational symmetry.
There are none but if it is an isosceles trapezoid it will have 1 line of symmetry
None unless it is an isosceles trapezoid then it will have 1 line of symmetry
An isosceles trapezoid can be.
A trapezoid has no lines of symmetry unless it is in the form of an isosceles trapezoid which has one line of symmetry
A "pure" trapezoid (a pair of parallel sides and two random sides) does not have rotational symmetry. If it is a parallelogram then it has a 180 degree symmetry. And if the paralloelogram happens to be a square, you have 90 deg symmetry.
No because 90 degrees and 180, 270 degrees don't work for the trapezoid
Yes, an isosceles trapezoid does have rotational symmetry. An isosceles trapezoid is a quadrilateral with two parallel sides of equal length, which means it can be rotated around its center by certain angles (180 degrees, in this case) and still look the same. This is an example of rotational symmetry, where the shape can be rotated and still appear unchanged.
No. A trapezoid does not necessarily have any symmetry.
A trapezium (or trapezoid) need to have any symmetry.
A trapezoid has no rotational symmetry.
A trapezoid has one line of symmetry.
Only if it is in the form of an isosceles trapezoid
There are none but if it is an isosceles trapezoid it will have 1 line of symmetry
None unless it is an isosceles trapezoid then it will have 1 line of symmetry
An isosceles trapezoid can be.
A trapezoid has no lines of symmetry unless it is in the form of an isosceles trapezoid which has one line of symmetry