two
All rectangles have 2 axes of symmetry, which are the lines joined by the two pairs of midpoints of opposite sides.
A rectangle has two axes of symmetry and has rotational symmetry of order 2.
Not at all. There are an infinite number of figures that have two lines of symmetry. For a start, an ellipse.
square
trapezoid
A quadrilateral that has exactly one line of symmetry is called a kite. In a kite, one diagonal acts as the line of symmetry, dividing the shape into two congruent triangles. The other diagonal of the kite is not a line of symmetry, as the two resulting triangles are not congruent. Kites are a specific type of quadrilateral with unique properties related to their symmetry and angles.
A four-sided quadrilateral having two lines of symmetry is a rectangle
two
All rectangles have 2 axes of symmetry, which are the lines joined by the two pairs of midpoints of opposite sides.
A rectangle has two axes of symmetry and has rotational symmetry of order 2.
A rectangle.
Try one of these: rhombus, parallelogram, square, rectangle
i think it has four lines of symmetry
Not at all. There are an infinite number of figures that have two lines of symmetry. For a start, an ellipse.
square
Any polygon with an even number of sides can have two lines of symmetry, but it would have to be irregular.