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.)
There are none but if it is an isosceles trapezoid it will have 1 line of symmetry
a trapezoid has a pair of symmetry lines but a square diamond or parallelogram all sides are parallel
An isosceles triangle has exactly one line of symmetry, a rectangle has two. A trapezoid can have none or one.
Yes, unless its a square, then there are four lines 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.)
There are none but if it is an isosceles trapezoid it will have 1 line of symmetry
A trapezoid is a quadrilateral with exactly two parallel sides.
a trapezoid has a pair of symmetry lines but a square diamond or parallelogram all sides are parallel
An isosceles triangle has exactly one line of symmetry, a rectangle has two. A trapezoid can have none or one.
A four-sided quadrilateral having two lines of symmetry is a rectangle
Technically, a square is a rectangle with four lines of symmetry. A non-square rectangle has exactly two lines of symmetry: the vertical and the horizontal.
It is a trapezoid
Yes, unless its a square, then there are four lines of symmetry.
A trapezoid doesn't necessarily have symmetry, but if it does it bisects the two parallel lines (ie vertically)
Not at all. There are an infinite number of figures that have two lines of symmetry. For a start, an ellipse.
No. A pentagon can have 1 or 5 lines of symmetry.