An isosceles trapezoid can be.
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
A trapezoid has no lines of symmetry unless it is in the form of an isosceles trapezoid which has one line of symmetry
Yes, a trapezoid may have two lines of symmetry, but the trapezoid must also be a rectangle.If the trapezoid is not also a rectangle, the the most symmetry lines it can have possible is 1 (this can only occur it's an isosceles trapezoid.)
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
None unless it is an isosceles trapezoid then it will have 1 line of symmetry
There are none but if it is an isosceles trapezoid it will have 1 line of symmetry
A trapezoid has no lines of symmetry unless it is in the form of an isosceles trapezoid which has one line of symmetry
Yes, a trapezoid may have two lines of symmetry, but the trapezoid must also be a rectangle.If the trapezoid is not also a rectangle, the the most symmetry lines it can have possible is 1 (this can only occur it's an isosceles trapezoid.)
Not normally but an isosceles trapezoid does.
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.
A trapezium does not have rotational symmetry.