Yes because it has three equal sides
A triangle has 3 sides and if two sides are equal then it's an isosceles triangle with one line if symmetry but if all sides are equal then it's an equilateral with three lines of symmetry.
An equilateral triangle.
A hexagon has 6 lines of symetry and a dodecagon has 12. The number of sides equal the number of ines of symetry
A hexagon, for example, has six lines of symmetry. Three of them go to opposite vertices, and three go to opposite sides.
The number of lines of symmetry of a triangle depends upon the kind of triangle it is:A scalene triangle with no side lengths equal has no lines of symmetry;An isosceles triangle with two sides equal has 1 line of symmetry that bisects the angle between the two equal sides;An equilateral triangle with all three sides equal has three lines of symmetry - the three lines are the bisectors of the three angles.A right triangle is a triangle where one angle is 90°. A right triangle is either a scalene triangle with no lines of symmetry or an isosceles triangle (where the legs are of equal length) with one line of symmetry which bisects the 90° angle.No triangle can have exactly 2 lines of symmetry.
Yes because it has three equal sides
The shape that has three lines of symmetry is the equilateral triangle. It also has three angles of equal size and three sides of equal length.
In order to have any lines of symmetry, a triangle must have either two sides equal (isosceles) or three sides equal (equilateral).
A triangle has 3 sides and if two sides are equal then it's an isosceles triangle with one line if symmetry but if all sides are equal then it's an equilateral with three lines of symmetry.
An equallateral triangle ~ID1533681184 Sorry ID1533681184 but and equallateral triangle does not have three lines of SYMMETRY, it has three line segments. ~EEE2
An equilateral triangle.
Depending on the triangle, there can be 0, 1, or three lines of symmetry. A scalene triangle (all sides of different lengths) will have no lines of symmetry, an isosceles triangle (exactly two sides of the same length) will have one line of symmetry, and an equilateral triangle (all three sides of the same length) will have three lines of symmetry.
Ah, what a happy little question! The shape you're thinking of is a scalene triangle. It doesn't have any lines of symmetry, but it does have rotational symmetry of order 4, which means it looks the same after being rotated 90 degrees four times. Isn't that just lovely?
A hexagon has 6 lines of symetry and a dodecagon has 12. The number of sides equal the number of ines of symetry
A hexagon, for example, has six lines of symmetry. Three of them go to opposite vertices, and three go to opposite sides.
There are three lines, three angles, and three sides or a triangle. Each angle of the equilateral triangle is exactly 60 degrees, because each angle is equal.