Most shapes have no line of symmetry and no right angle. Look at your hand, feet, face or body (the last two are only nearly symmetrical), the keyboard, the monitor.
An isosceles right angle triangle fits the description
A right angle has one line of symmetry.
A symmetrical shape is said to have line symmetry. A shape that has line symmetry can have one or more lines of symmetry
One.One.One.One.
Yes. Any equilateral shape can have both rotational and line symmetry.
An isosceles right angle triangle fits the description
A right angle has one line of symmetry.
It depends. If it is a right isosceles triangle, it has one axis of symmetry (the line which would bisect the right angle). A right scalene triangle has no axis of symmetry.
A line of symmetry in a shape is an imaginary line that divides the shape into two equal halves that are mirror images of each other. When a shape is folded along its line of symmetry, both sides match perfectly.
the distance from a point on either ray of the angle that is equidistance from the axis of symmetry is the line of symmetry. the line of symmetry dives the angle in half.
None normally but if it is a right angle isosceles triangle it will have 1 line of symmetry
A symmetrical shape is said to have line symmetry. A shape that has line symmetry can have one or more lines of symmetry
a shape with a line of symmetry
1 its from the "right angle point" on a diagonal to the center of the longest line.None normally but if it's an isosceles right angle triangle it will have 1 line of symmetry.
Yes. Any equilateral shape can have both rotational and line symmetry.
One.One.One.One.
A scalene triangle would fit the given description if it has 3 different acute angles that add up to 180 degrees.