No, a triangle does not have point symmetry. Point symmetry occurs when an object or shape remains the same after being rotated 180 degrees around a central point. In the case of a triangle, it does not have point symmetry because it does not look the same after a 180-degree rotation.
yes because if u put it by a mirror u look at that by yourself
If a triangle is congruent to another triangle, they are exactly the same. therefore, a congruent triangle can look like anything.
a line of symmetry is the middle of a shape that is the same on both sides
An isocolese triangle is look like two sides are same long.
they are the same
the answer is 12 or 5 it is all how you look at it............
For an equilateral triangle, there are three axes of symmetry. A plane figure is symmetrical about the line l if, whenever P is a point of the figure, so too is P', where P' is the mirror-image of P in the line l. The line is called a line of symmetry (or axis of symmetry), and the figure is said to be a symmetrical by the reflection in the line l. An equilateral triangle with reflection symmetry has two halves that are mirror images of each other. If the shape is folded over its line of symmetry, the two halves of the shape match exactly. So, we can say that the two halves of an equilateral triangle are matched exactly only when its shape is folded over the lines of symmetry that passes through their vertixes and the midpoint of its sides. Thus, an equilateral triangle has three lines of symmetry, and three angles of rotation. If you rotate any shape a full turn, it will look like it did before you rotated it. When you rotate a shape less than a full turn about its center point and it looks exactly as it did before you rotated it, it has rotation symmetry. In an equilateral triangle there are three places in the rotation where the triangle will look exactly the same as its starting position. If we turn the triangle one third of a full turn (60 degrees), the vertex 1 will be at position 3, vertex 2 will be at position 1, and vertex 3 will be at position 2, and the triangle will look like its starting position.
No, a triangle does not have point symmetry. Point symmetry occurs when an object or shape remains the same after being rotated 180 degrees around a central point. In the case of a triangle, it does not have point symmetry because it does not look the same after a 180-degree rotation.
It will look like a right angle triangle with a 90 degree angle and two 45 degree angles and will have one line of symmetry
The line (or surface) across which things are (exactly) the same. Look in a mirror. Draw a line from your head to between your feet. You are considered symmetrical to your left/right ... but not up/down nor front/back. The question should have been written as "What are axes of symmetry?" because axes is plural and axis is singular.
yes because if u put it by a mirror u look at that by yourself
The rectangle's rotational symmetry is of order 2. A square's rotational symmetry is of order 4; the triangle has a symmetry of order 3. Rotational symmetry is the number of times a figure can be rotated and still look the same as the original figure.
If a triangle is congruent to another triangle, they are exactly the same. therefore, a congruent triangle can look like anything.
it looks like a triangle
a triangle ;)
Yes is a rotational symmetry 180 degree it will look like these