Numbers that have reflection symmetry are those that look the same when flipped or mirrored along a vertical axis. Examples include the digits 0, 1, and 8, as they maintain their appearance when reflected. Additionally, the number 6 can appear symmetric when rotated, but it is not symmetrical in a strict reflection sense. Overall, reflection symmetry in numbers primarily applies to certain digits rather than whole numbers or sequences.
Reflection symmetry, reflectional symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, mirror-image symmetry, or bilateral symmetry is symmetry with respect to reflection
None - it has rotational symmetry - not reflection symmetry.
reflection
Nope - it has rotational symmetry.
No, but it HAS reflection symmetry
Reflection symmetry, reflectional symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, mirror-image symmetry, or bilateral symmetry is symmetry with respect to reflection
None - it has rotational symmetry - not reflection symmetry.
reflection
square
Nope - it has rotational symmetry.
No, but it HAS reflection symmetry
Yes
A pentagon does have reflective symmetry.
Another name for reflection symmetry is mirror symmetry.
No. No. No. No.
No. A trapezoid does not necessarily have any symmetry.
A square has 4 lines of symmetry