You cannot. An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry, an isosceles has one and a scalene none. So there is no triangle with two lines of symmetry. Of course, you could draw only two of the three possible lines of symmetry for an equilateral triangle.
An equilateral triangle has three lines of symmetry. Pick a corner, and draw a line from there to the center of the opposite side of the triangle. That is one of the lines of symmetry. You can get the other two lines by doing this to the other two corners. An isosceles triangle only has one line of symmetry and a scalene triangle has none.
An equilateral triangle contains at least 2 lines of symmetry (it actually contains 3 lines of symmetry). An equilateral triangle is also radially symmetric.If the question is "Is there a triangle with exactly 2 lines lines of symmetry?", the answer is no.
A triangle........I think
An equilateral triangle has three lines of symmetry.
A triangle with two lines of symmetry does not exist. It can have one line of symmetry (an isosceles triangle) or three (an equilateral triangle), but not two.
There are no lines of symmetry.
An EQUILATERAL Triangle. Two lines of symmetry is ISOSCELES Triangle No lines of symmetyry is SCALENE Triangle.
No triangle has two lines of symmetry. A right triangle and an Isoscoles triange each have one line of symmetry, and an equilateral triangle has three.
You cannot. An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry, an isosceles has one and a scalene none. So there is no triangle with two lines of symmetry. Of course, you could draw only two of the three possible lines of symmetry for an equilateral triangle.
An equilateral triangle will have three lines of symmetry. Others will have one (or none). There is no triangle with only two.
The number of lines of symmetry of a triangle depends upon the kind of triangle it is:A scalene triangle with no side lengths equal has no lines of symmetry;An isosceles triangle with two sides equal has 1 line of symmetry that bisects the angle between the two equal sides;An equilateral triangle with all three sides equal has three lines of symmetry - the three lines are the bisectors of the three angles.A right triangle is a triangle where one angle is 90°. A right triangle is either a scalene triangle with no lines of symmetry or an isosceles triangle (where the legs are of equal length) with one line of symmetry which bisects the 90° angle.No triangle can have exactly 2 lines of symmetry.
An isosceles triangle has 1 line of symmetry, an equilateral triangle has 3 and a scalene triangle has no lines of symmetry.
If you mean which triangle has at least two lines of symmetry, I can answer your question: an equilateral triangle has three lines of symmetry-- one passing through the center of each side and through the opposite point, perpendicular to the side.
a scalene triangle has no lines of symmetry
An equilateral triangle has three lines of symmetry. Pick a corner, and draw a line from there to the center of the opposite side of the triangle. That is one of the lines of symmetry. You can get the other two lines by doing this to the other two corners. An isosceles triangle only has one line of symmetry and a scalene triangle has none.
An equilateral triangle contains at least 2 lines of symmetry (it actually contains 3 lines of symmetry). An equilateral triangle is also radially symmetric.If the question is "Is there a triangle with exactly 2 lines lines of symmetry?", the answer is no.