No.
In cyclical order. For example, if the sides of a hexagon are in three similar parts: a,a,b,b,c and c then rotational symmetry requires them to be in the order a-b-c-a-b-c (or similar). The angles also need to follow the same pattern.
180 degrees Celsius = 356 degrees Fahrenheit.
The sum of the angles is 180 degrees. So if the ratios are a, b and c then the angles are180*a/(a+b+c), 180*b/(a+b+c) and 180*c/(a+b+c) degrees.
180 c = 356 f
No.
Yes
A) 68 degrees B) 135 degrees C) 90 degrees D) 45 degrees
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, J, K, L, M, P, Q, R, T, U, V, W, Y. A figure has rotational symmetry of order 1 only if it has to be rotated through 360 degrees before its image is congruent. In common usage, it has NO rotational symmetry.
Only one.
180 degrees C = 356 degrees F.
In cyclical order. For example, if the sides of a hexagon are in three similar parts: a,a,b,b,c and c then rotational symmetry requires them to be in the order a-b-c-a-b-c (or similar). The angles also need to follow the same pattern.
180 degrees Celsius is equal to 356 degrees Fahrenheit.
A B C D E H K M U V W X Y * * * * * What? Most of these letters do not have rotational symmetry and so cannot have rotational AND line symmetry. Or did the meaning of AND change last night? The only upper case letters with both are H, I, O, X
180 degrees Celsius = 356 degrees Fahrenheit.
180 degrees Celsius = 356 degrees Fahrenheit
180 degrees Celsius is equal to 356 degrees Fahrenheit.