that depends on the triangle. if the triangle has no two sides that are the same length, then it is called a scalene triangle and it has no lines of symmetry. if the triangle has two sides that are the same length, the triangle has one line of symmetry, starting at the angle where the two same length sides meet, and ending at the center of the opposite side. if all three sides are the same length, the triangle has three lines of symmetry, between any angle an the center of the opposite side.
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.
A triangle has by definition three intersecting sides. If two of the sides are parallel, they will never intersect, so no triangle can ever be formed.
Depending on the triangle, there can be 0, 1, or three lines of symmetry. A scalene triangle (all sides of different lengths) will have no lines of symmetry, an isosceles triangle (exactly two sides of the same length) will have one line of symmetry, and an equilateral triangle (all three sides of the same length) will have three lines of symmetry.
Well since isosceles can only have two equal angles and two equal sides and a triangle has 3 angles and 3 sides it can really only have 1 line of symmetry.
No, Because the lines in a triangle meet, so they cant be parallel because parallel lines never meet.
It is impossible two have a triangle that only has two sides. By definition a triangle is a shape that has three sides.
If you mean "triangle", a triangle can never have two parallel sides.If you mean "triangle", a triangle can never have two parallel sides.If you mean "triangle", a triangle can never have two parallel sides.If you mean "triangle", a triangle can never have two parallel sides.
That would be a right triangle. The perpendicular lines make up the right angle.
An isosceles triangle has two equal sides and two equal angles
that depends on the triangle. if the triangle has no two sides that are the same length, then it is called a scalene triangle and it has no lines of symmetry. if the triangle has two sides that are the same length, the triangle has one line of symmetry, starting at the angle where the two same length sides meet, and ending at the center of the opposite side. if all three sides are the same length, the triangle has three lines of symmetry, between any angle an the center of the opposite side.
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.
A triangle has by definition three intersecting sides. If two of the sides are parallel, they will never intersect, so no triangle can ever be formed.
No it can't, because if a triangle has two parallel lines then it ceases to be a triangle and becomes quadrilateral or a polygon.
There are no lines of symmentry in a scalene triangle. If you were to put a line anywhere in a scalene triangle, the two sides would not be symmetrical because scalene triangle has all different sides and all different angles.
A triangle has 3 sides and if two sides are equal then it's an isosceles triangle with one line if symmetry but if all sides are equal then it's an equilateral with three lines of symmetry.
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.