A cylinder has an infinite number of axes of symmetry. Any axis that passes through the center and is perpendicular to the circular bases serves as an axis of symmetry. Additionally, any vertical axis that passes through the center of the cylinder's height and intersects the circular bases also acts as an axis of symmetry.
It has 1 line of symmetry
It has 1 line of symmetry or 'mirror image'
All rectangles have 2 axes of symmetry, which are the lines joined by the two pairs of midpoints of opposite sides.
two
There are none.
There are infinitely many axes of symmetry in mathematics.
a rectangle has 2 axes of symmetry
A square has 4 axes of symmetry.
It has 5 axes of symmetry
A regular pentagon has five axes of symmetry.
An isosceles triangle definitely has three axes of symmetry
Not sure about a duodecagon, but a regular dodecagon has 12 axes of symmetry.
A polygon need not have any axes of symmetry. It can have at most n axes where n is the number of sides that the polygon has.
2 axes from angles to angles
a tetrahedron has 7 axis of symmetry
It has 1 line of symmetry
4