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Core

Symmetry: Core

Core

Symmetry (NCERT Ch. 13)

What you'll learn

  • Identify figures with line symmetry (also called reflection symmetry or mirror symmetry).
  • Find the number of lines of symmetry in common shapes.
  • Relate symmetry to mirror reflection.

Key concepts

  1. A figure has line symmetry if it can be folded along a line so the two halves match exactly.
  2. This fold line is called the line of symmetry (or axis of symmetry).
  3. A figure can have no, one, or many lines of symmetry.
  4. A circle has infinite lines of symmetry (any diameter works).
  5. A regular polygon with n sides has exactly n lines of symmetry.
  6. Mirror reflection produces a symmetric (left-right reversed) image about the mirror line.

Worked example

How many lines of symmetry does a square have?

A square has 4 lines of symmetry: 2 through opposite vertices (diagonals)
and 2 through midpoints of opposite sides.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming every closed shape is symmetric — many irregular shapes have zero lines of symmetry.
  • Confusing rotational symmetry with line symmetry (line symmetry needs a fold/mirror line).
  • Miscounting lines of symmetry in regular polygons (it always equals the number of sides).

Quick check

  • How many lines of symmetry does an equilateral triangle have?
  • Does the letter "F" have a line of symmetry?

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Symmetry (NCERT Ch. 13).

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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