Pentagon
almost all even number of sided polygons, regular has to be
Lines of symmetry in polygons are not necessarily diagonals. A line of symmetry divides a shape into two identical halves, while a diagonal connects non-adjacent vertices of a polygon. In some cases, a diagonal can serve as a line of symmetry, but this is not true for all polygons. Therefore, while there can be overlap, the two concepts are distinct and not synonymous.
Yes, line symmetry can be diagonal. An object exhibits diagonal line symmetry if it can be divided into two identical halves along a diagonal line, meaning one half is a mirror image of the other. This type of symmetry can be seen in shapes like diamonds or certain quadrilaterals.
Axis of symmetry.
yes
almost all even number of sided polygons, regular has to be
square
A square
Lines of symmetry in polygons are not necessarily diagonals. A line of symmetry divides a shape into two identical halves, while a diagonal connects non-adjacent vertices of a polygon. In some cases, a diagonal can serve as a line of symmetry, but this is not true for all polygons. Therefore, while there can be overlap, the two concepts are distinct and not synonymous.
The most obvious one is the square. But it seems to me thatit's true for any regular polygon with an even number of sides.
Yes, line symmetry can be diagonal. An object exhibits diagonal line symmetry if it can be divided into two identical halves along a diagonal line, meaning one half is a mirror image of the other. This type of symmetry can be seen in shapes like diamonds or certain quadrilaterals.
It has a line of rotational symmetry - along the diagonal.
Axis of symmetry.
yes
No.
Yes * * * * * Not generally.
yes