H has two lines of symmetry, vertically and horizontally in the center.
A rectangle has 2 lines of symmetry. One that cuts it in half horizontally and another that cuts it vertically.
Any rectangle has two lines of symmetry - one dividing it in half horizontally and one vertically, both passing through the center.
Graphically, a line or many lines going vertically or horizontally in a slanting position, connecting and dis-connecting, and mirroring each other making a 'zigzag' example: /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
Three capital letters that have two lines of symmetry are "O", "H", and "I" since they can be reflected either horizontally or vertically and still look the same.
true
H has two lines of symmetry, vertically and horizontally in the center.
It has two lines of symmetry vertically and horizontally
Guide Lines
Longitude lines go vertically and latitude lines go horizontally.
A rectangle has 2 lines of symmetry. One that cuts it in half horizontally and another that cuts it vertically.
Chart paper is lines going vertically and horizontally so you can graph stuff.
No it doesn't "h" only has 2 lines of symmetry one horizontally and one vertically.
Lines of latitude are used on a map or globe. They are the lines that run horizontally or left to right, while longitude lines run vertically or up and down.
1.longitude lines go vertically 2. latitude lines go horizontally 3.latitude is the angular distance o degrees of the equator By "vertically" is meant "north-south". By "horizontally" is meant "east - west".
It depends on the scale of the map. On a map of the world or a continent, the parallel lines will generally go horizontally across the map - East to West. For a large scale map, showing a small country or a local area, the vertical lines (North - South) will also be shown as parallel.
Any rectangle has two lines of symmetry - one dividing it in half horizontally and one vertically, both passing through the center.