Equilateral Triangles (3 lines of symmetry)Rectangles (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Squares (4 lines of symmetry)Rhombuses (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Any regular polygon (at least 5 lines of symmetry)
triangles
They both have the same amount of lines of symmetry. * * * * * Not true. A square has four lines of symmetry, a rectangle only two.
Yes a rhombus has 2 lines of symmetry. These lines of symmetry join its opposite corners.
Since the statement does not say that they have exactly two lines of symmetry, I do not believe that there is a counter example.
Not at all. There are an infinite number of figures that have two lines of symmetry. For a start, an ellipse.
An equilateral triangle has exactly 3 lines of symmetry.
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answers
There are no lines of symmetry.
In this font it has two lines of symmetry.
A nephroid has 2 lines of symmetry.
Ellipses and non-square rectangles have two lines of symmetry.
A parallelagram can be a square, which has four lines of symmetry or a rectangle which has two lines of symmetry but the generic parallelagram has zero lines of symmetry
Squares, which are parallelograms, have four lines of symmetry. Rectangles have only two. Rhombi have two lines of symmetry. Generic parallelograms don't have any lines of symmetry.None normally unless it is in the shape of a rectangle in which case it will have 2 lines of symmetry
Yes. Some example of this are:Rectangles (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Squares (4 lines of symmetry)Rhombuses (at least 2 lines of symmetry)
Equilateral Triangles (3 lines of symmetry)Rectangles (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Squares (4 lines of symmetry)Rhombuses (at least 2 lines of symmetry)Any regular polygon (at least 5 lines of symmetry)