The only shape that has 4 lines of symmetry is a square.
square
A square
A figure has rotational symmetry if you can turn it about a figure.
it is a figure that rotates around aline of symmetry
a square
square
A square
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.
A figure has rotational symmetry if you can turn it about a figure.
yes
square
A figure has rotational symmetry if it can be rotated by a certain angle (less than 360 degrees) and still looks the same. The number of times you can rotate the figure and have it look the same determines the order of rotational symmetry - a square has rotational symmetry of order 4, for example.
The letters S and N have point symmetry but not line symmetry.
A parallelogram does not have a line of symmetry.
it is a figure that rotates around aline of symmetry
yes
Equilateral Triangles (3 lines of symmetry)Rectangles (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Squares (4 lines of symmetry)Rhombuses (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Any regular polygon (at least 5 lines of symmetry)