Yes, regular hexagons have half-turn symmetry.
It can.
The regular hexagon's rotational symmetry order is six. This means that the hexagon can be turned 360 degrees and look the same six times. A hexagon is a six-sided figure with six lines of symmetry.
A regular hexagon has six lines of symmetry. Lines of symmetry are imaginary lines where you can fold a figure or image and both halves are identical matches.
A regular hexagon has 6 rotational symmetries (rotational symmetry of order six) and 6 reflective symmetries (six lines of symmetry).
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A hexagon has 6 lines of symmetry.
A regular hexagon has six lines of symmetry.
if it's a regular hexagon it has 6 lines of symmetry
if it is a regular hexagon then it has 6 lines of symmetry
A hexagon can have 0,1,2,3,4 or 6 (not 5) lines of symmetry.
A hexagon can have 0, 1, 2, 3 or 6 lines of symmetry.
A regular 6 sided hexagon has 6 lines of symmetry
A hexagon without symmetry is the most common form for a hexagon.
A hexagon can have rotational symmetry of order 1, 2, 3 or 6.It can have 0, 1, 2 or 6 axes of symmetry.
No, a regular hexagon has six lines of symmetry, and an irregular hexagon typically has fewer. To have exactly two lines of symmetry, the shape would need to be an asymmetric polygon, which isn't classified as a hexagon. Therefore, it's impossible to create a hexagon that has exactly two lines of symmetry.
It can.
In general, none. If all the sides of a hexagon were of different length it would have no symmetry.