no it onlys has 1 line of symmetry
Yes. Think of a kite shape. Symmetry along its length but no parallel sides.
A kite has only one line of rotational symmetry, as it is only the same if it is tilted once. (back to its normal position).
The shape that fits this description is a kite. A kite has two pairs of equal sides, with one pair longer than the other. It also has one line of symmetry, which divides the kite into two equal halves. Additionally, a kite has one pair of equal angles, formed by the intersection of the longer sides.
No, the centre of symmetry is a point usually somewhere in the middle of an object around which things like rotational or reflection occurs. Inversion symmetry is a sort of symmetry itself and not a point like the centre.
A kite, for example.A kite, for example.A kite, for example.A kite, for example.
A kite can have only one line of symmetry but it can also have 2 or 3. It depends what kite.
A kite has 1 line of symmetry and a square has 4 lines of symmetry and so there are 5 lines of symmetry altogether.
There is one line of symmetry in a kite
A kite does not have rotational symmetry.
It has 1 line of symmetry
A kite, for example.
A kite usually has straight line symmetry. It can be folded in half, and be exactly the same on each side.
Draw the shape kite and then do symmetry lines across it.
it has 1 line of symmetry
It has 1 line of symmetry
a kite