Draw, wherever possible, a rough sketch of: (i) a triangle with both line and rotational symmetries

$ 24.99

4.7 (287) In stock

Draw, wherever possible, a rough sketch of: (i) a triangle with both line and rotational symmetries of order more than 1. (ii) a triangle with only line symmetry and no rotational symmetry of order more than 1. (iii) a quadrilateral with a rotational symmetry of order more than 1 but not a line symmetry. (iv) a quadrilateral with line symmetry but not rotational symmetry of order more than 1.
(i) An equilateral triangle has both line and rotational symmetry of order more than 1, (ii) An isosceles triangle has only one- line symmetry and no rotational symmetry of order more than 1, (iii) A quadrilateral with a line symmetry may have rotational symmetry of order one but not more than one. Hence, it is not possible to draw, (iv) A trapezium is a quadrilateral which has only one line of symmetry but not rotational symmetry of order more than 1.

Draw wherever possible a rough sketch of a quadrilateral with line of symmetry but not a rotation symmetry of order more than 1.

NCERT Book for Class 7 Maths: Chapter 14-Symmetry - IndCareer Docs

Draw, wherever possible, a rough sketch of: (i) a triangle with both line and rotational symmetries

Question 2 iDraw, wherever possible a rough sketch of:i A triangle with both line and rotational symmetries of order more than 1 .

NCERT Solutions for Class 7 Maths Chapter 12 Exercise 12.3

Fill in the blanks

Draw a rough sketch of (ii) a triangle with only line symmetry and no

Draw, wherever possible, a rough sketch of: (I) a triangle with both line and rotational symmetries of order more than 1. (ii) a triangle with only line symmetry and no rotational symmetry

Punjabi] Draw, wherever possible, a rough sketch of a triangle with o

Related products

How to Find the Height of a Triangle (Right, Equilateral, Isosceles)

Chic Random Triangle Fabric, Wallpaper and Home Decor

Proof that a Triangle is 180 Degrees (Review Video)

Triangle -- from Wolfram MathWorld

Triangles - Angles, lines and polygons - Eduqas - GCSE Maths Revision - Eduqas - BBC Bitesize