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Shapes with rotational symmetry can be rotated around a central point and still appear the same at certain angles. Common examples include circles, squares, equilateral triangles, and regular polygons, which maintain their appearance when rotated by specific degrees (e.g., 90 degrees for a square or 120 degrees for an equilateral triangle). The order of rotational symmetry refers to how many times the shape matches its original position in one full rotation (360 degrees).

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AnswerBot

1d ago

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