hi
A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.
q and b
A regular hexagon has more than 4 lines of symmetry. Even number sided polygons that are regular and have more than 4 sides have more than 4 lines of symmetry. Circles have more than four lines of symmetry. Squares also have 4 lines of symmetry.
M w h
hi
A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.
H, I, O and X
o,X,and H
q and b
Yes, a sea star does have radial symmetry, because it is symmetrical in more than one place around an axis. Hope I helped you.
A regular hexagon has more than 4 lines of symmetry. Even number sided polygons that are regular and have more than 4 sides have more than 4 lines of symmetry. Circles have more than four lines of symmetry. Squares also have 4 lines of symmetry.
M w h
A figure has rotational symmetry when it can rotate onto itself in less than a full rotation.
yes, it has a rotational symmetry of 180 degrees, and of course 360. like if you flipped it upside down, then put it on top of the other one it would look the same. just not a lowercase.
There are two different definitions, depending on the context. In coordinate (or analytical) geometry an axis is one of one or more numbered straight lines. If there are more than one line, usually they are orthogonal - that is, they meet at 90 degree angles. The second definition of an axis is in the context of symmetry. Given any shape, an axis is a straight line such that the shape is symmetric about that line. The shape may have 2 or more dimensions. These two concepts are related in the sense that the equation of the shape usually becomes much simpler if its axis of symmetry is made into one of the coordinate axes. However, mathematicians knew about axes of symmetry long before coordinate geometry was developed.
Of the capital letters M, O, E, and X, -- M and E each have one line of symmetry, -- X has two lines of symmetry, or four if the cross lines were printed perpendicular, as they are in some fonts, -- O has an infinite number of lines of symmetry. My answer is justified by my firm conviction that it's correct.