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.
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A triangle with two lines of symmetry is an isosceles triangle. In an isosceles triangle, two sides are of equal length, and the angles opposite those sides are equal. The lines of symmetry would pass through the vertex angle (the angle between the two equal sides) and the midpoint of the base of the triangle. This results in the isosceles triangle being symmetric along both the vertical axis and the line passing through the midpoint of the base.
Well, honey, a triangle with 2 lines of symmetry is just a fancy way of saying it's an isosceles triangle. That means two sides are the same length and two angles are the same measure. So, if you see a triangle strutting its stuff with a couple of lines of symmetry, you can bet your bottom dollar it's an isoscejson.
If there is no triangle with 2 lines of symmetry then you can write an equilateral triangle. It means same only
An isosceles triangle has 1 line of symmetry, an equilateral triangle has 3 and a scalene triangle has no lines of symmetry.
A regular triangle (aka equilateral triangle) has three lines of symmetry - these are its medians, In general, a regular n-gon has n lines of symmetry.
A scalene triangle
A triangle can have 0, 1 or 3 lines of symmetry.
Triangle * * * * * The only triangle with rotational symmetry of order 3 is an equilateral triangle and that has 3 lines of symmetry, not 0. The triskelion (the three legs) on the Isle of Man flag has rotational symmetry of order 3 but no lines of symmetry.