you eat the lins and then burp out 2 squares
impossible u would have to move 4 lines
With two lines, make a big perpendicular plus sign. Then use two lines apiece to square off two of the opposite angles. The two squares will be joined at one corner.
If you are talking about a triangle it has two. Squares have four.
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)
Using the first four lines, draw a square. Now use the next two lines to bisect the square both horizontally and vertically. You now have one square divided into four smaller squares. Use the last two lines to diagonally bisect two of the four smaller squares. There you go.
you have to draw four squares. all up by each other and then you take out the two middle ones.
Remove one of the outer toothpicks and one of the dividers of two squares. there you have two SQUARES .
impossible u would have to move 4 lines
Yes. They have two pairs.
With two lines, make a big perpendicular plus sign. Then use two lines apiece to square off two of the opposite angles. The two squares will be joined at one corner.
Draw a rectangle with length twice its width, you would have used 4 lines already. Then draw a straight line at the center. The result will be two identical squares.
Easy. Step one: Draw a long-enough straight line. Step two: Draw 3 lines on each half of it to form squares Done.
If you are talking about a triangle it has two. Squares have four.
Since by definition a parallelogram is a quadrilateral with two sets of parallel lines, a rectangle is a parallelogram. Since we know that squares are rectangles, we can conclude that squares are parallelograms.
parralelagram, which includes rectangles and squares
All squares have two pairs of parallel lines. That's four lines, but they are not all parallel to each other.
Once completed, this sculpture looks like a Christmas tree. Chop out eight squares on the top of the grid from both sides so only the middle square is left untouched. Then chop out seven squares on both sides. Chop out another seven squares on both sides. This will leave three squares untouched, both times, in the middle of the grid. Next, chop out six squares on both sides, then another six squares. This will leave five squares untouched in the middle both times. Then chop out five squares on both sides, then, once again, another five squares. This will leave seven squares untouched in the middle of the grid both times. Then chop out four squares on both sides, two times. This will leave nine squares untouched in the middle of the grid. Then chop out three squares two times from both sides. This will leave eleven squares untouched in the middle of the grid both times. Then chop out only two squares on both sides. This will leave thirteen squares untouched in the middle of the grid. Then, on the bottom of the grid, chop out seven squares on both sides, leaving three squares untouched in the middle of the grid and you're done!