Yes capital A has one line of symmetry or 'mirror image'
When it has a line of symmetry or 'mirror image' as for example in the capital letter A
Yes, the capital letter N has rotational symmetry but no lines of symmetry:
yes it has one * * * * * No, the lower case letter has no line of symmetry.
In a capital latter E, there is only 1 line of symmetry horizontally accros the middle.
Yes capital A has one line of symmetry or 'mirror image'
When it has a line of symmetry or 'mirror image' as for example in the capital letter A
2
j
Yes, the capital letter N has rotational symmetry but no lines of symmetry:
yes it has one * * * * * No, the lower case letter has no line of symmetry.
A capital "B" has one horizontal line of symmetry.
No. An object/image has symmetry if you can draw a straight line through it and both sides are symmetrical (where the image looks the same on both sides of the line of symmetry.) There is no angle that you can place a line on the capital letter 'L' and get symmetrical images.
The capital letter H does B, C, D, E, H, I, K, O, and X have a horizontal symmetry line.
In a capital latter E, there is only 1 line of symmetry horizontally accros the middle.
A line that divides the letter so that the 2 halves are mirror images. Ex. The letter V ... A vertical line thru the bottom makes 2 parts that are mirror images, so that vertical line is the axis of symmetry. But.. A Capital E would not have a vertical axis of symmetry. Capital E would have a horizontal line splitting thru the middle line as its axis of symmetry.
Looks like there's one line of symmetry, so try capital A