a cube!
Many figures. For example, an ellipse.
It has rotational symmetry to the order of 2
A regular nonagon with 9 sides has a rotational symmetry of 9.
Rotational symmetry of order 1.
A line has 180 degrees rotational symmetry.
The parallelogramApex - TF
answer
Many figures. For example, an ellipse.
A square, hexagon
equilateral triangle
Figures that have rotational symmetry include circles, regular polygons (like squares, equilateral triangles, and hexagons), and three-dimensional shapes such as spheres, cylinders, and cones. A figure exhibits rotational symmetry if it can be rotated around a central point by a certain angle and still look the same as it did before the rotation. The angle of rotation depends on the figure; for instance, a square has rotational symmetry at 90-degree intervals, while a circle has infinite rotational symmetry.
The order of rotational symmetry of a equilateral triangle is three. However, the order of an isosceles triangle is one. So, the rotational symmetry depends on the specific type of triangle figure. However, all figures have at least one order. Rotational symmetry is associated with how a shape can be rotated and retains the same or similar appearance.
A trapezium does not have rotational symmetry.
The letters H and Z have both line symmetry and rotational symmetry
It has 8lines of rotational symmetry
It has rotational symmetry to the order of 2
No a Z doesn't have a rotational symmetry