By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define symmetry and identify lines of symmetry in 2D figures
  • 2Count lines of symmetry in regular polygons, letters, and common shapes
  • 3Understand reflection symmetry and the mirror image concept
  • 4Identify figures with rotational symmetry and determine their order
  • 5Distinguish between line symmetry and rotational symmetry
  • 6Recognize symmetry in nature, art, and everyday objects
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Why this chapter matters
Symmetry connects mathematics to art, nature, and design. Understanding symmetry develops geometric intuition and visual-spatial reasoning. It's the foundation for topics like transformations, tessellations, and group theory in higher mathematics, and is essential in fields like architecture, crystallography, and computer graphics.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Symmetry — Class 6 Maths (Ganita Prakash)

1. About This Chapter

Symmetry surrounds us — in the wings of a butterfly, the petals of a flower, the letters of the alphabet, and the architecture of monuments like the Taj Mahal. Chapter 9 of Ganita Prakash formalizes this intuitive idea: a shape is symmetric if one half mirrors the other. The chapter explores line symmetry, reflection symmetry, and introduces rotational symmetry.


2. What Is Symmetry?

A figure is symmetric if it can be divided into two identical halves that are mirror images of each other. The line that divides the figure is called the line of symmetry or axis of symmetry.

Think of folding a paper in half — if the two halves match perfectly, the fold line is a line of symmetry.


3. Line (Mirror) Symmetry

Figures with 1 Line of Symmetry:

  • An isosceles triangle
  • The letter A
  • A heart shape ♥

Figures with 2 Lines of Symmetry:

  • A rectangle (vertical + horizontal through centre)
  • The letter H
  • The letter X

Figures with 3 Lines of Symmetry:

  • An equilateral triangle

Figures with 4 Lines of Symmetry:

  • A square

Figures with Infinite Lines of Symmetry:

  • A circle — any diameter is a line of symmetry!

4. Symmetry in Letters and Numbers

Number of LinesLettersNumbers
0 (No symmetry)F, G, J, L, N, P, Q, R, S, Z1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9
1 (Vertical)A, M, T, U, V, W, Y
1 (Horizontal)B, C, D, E, K3
2H, I, O, X0, 8

5. Reflection Symmetry

Reflection symmetry is the same as line symmetry — one half is the mirror reflection of the other. The line of symmetry acts like a mirror.

Key observations:

  • Every point on one side has a corresponding point on the other side
  • The corresponding point is at the same perpendicular distance from the line of symmetry
  • The line joining a point and its mirror image is perpendicular to the line of symmetry

6. Rotational Symmetry (Introduction)

A shape has rotational symmetry if it looks the same after being rotated by less than 360° about its centre.

Examples:

  • Square: Looks the same after 90°, 180°, 270° rotations — rotational symmetry of order 4
  • Equilateral Triangle: Looks the same after 120°, 240° — rotational symmetry of order 3
  • Rectangle: Looks the same after 180° — rotational symmetry of order 2
  • Circle: Rotational symmetry of infinite order

The order of rotational symmetry = number of positions in one full rotation where the figure looks exactly the same.


7. Lines of Symmetry in Common Shapes

ShapeLines of SymmetryRotational Symmetry Order
Scalene Triangle01
Isosceles Triangle11
Equilateral Triangle33
Square44
Rectangle22
Rhombus22
Parallelogram02
CircleInfiniteInfinite
Regular Pentagon55
Regular Hexagon66

8. Symmetry in Nature and Art

Nature is filled with symmetry:

  • Butterfly wings — 1 line of symmetry
  • Starfish — 5 lines of symmetry
  • Snowflakes — 6 lines of symmetry
  • Human face — approximately 1 line of symmetry (vertical)

Art and architecture celebrate symmetry:

  • Taj Mahal — perfect reflection symmetry
  • Rangoli designs — often have rotational symmetry
  • Mandala art — combines reflection and rotational symmetry

9. Key Concepts Summary

ConceptDefinition
Line of SymmetryA line dividing a figure into two mirror-image halves
Reflection SymmetryOne half is the mirror image of the other
Rotational SymmetryFigure looks the same after rotation by a certain angle
Order of Rotational SymmetryNumber of times a figure matches itself in one full 360° rotation

10. Important Vocabulary

  • Symmetry: Balanced and proportionate similarity between two halves
  • Line/Axis of Symmetry: The line that divides a symmetric figure into two mirror halves
  • Reflection: Mirror image
  • Rotational Symmetry: A figure matching itself when rotated
  • Order: Number of matching positions in a full rotation

11. Worked Examples

Example 1: How many lines of symmetry does a regular pentagon have?

Answer: 5 — one from each vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side.

Example 2: Write three letters with 2 lines of symmetry.

Answer: H, I, O, X (any three).

Example 3: Does a parallelogram have line symmetry?

Answer: No, a general parallelogram has NO lines of symmetry. (But it does have rotational symmetry of order 2.)


12. Conclusion

Symmetry blends mathematics with beauty. Understanding symmetry helps students develop geometric intuition — the ability to see patterns, predict reflections, and understand rotational relationships. This chapter connects mathematics to art, nature, and architecture, showing that math is not just about numbers but about the patterns that make our world beautiful.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

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Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
How many lines of symmetry does a regular hexagon have?
Show solution
6 lines of symmetry
Q2MEDIUM
Which has more lines of symmetry — a square or an equilateral triangle?
Show solution
Square (4 lines) vs Equilateral triangle (3 lines). The square has more.
Q3MEDIUM
Name a shape that has rotational symmetry but NO line symmetry.
Show solution
A parallelogram (order 2 rotational symmetry, 0 lines of symmetry).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Line symmetry: one half is mirror of other
  • Rotational symmetry: figure matches itself on rotation
  • Square: 4 line, 4 rotational
  • Equilateral triangle: 3 line, 3 rotational
  • Rectangle: 2 line, 2 rotational
  • Parallelogram: 0 line, 2 rotational
  • Circle: infinite line, infinite rotational
  • Regular n-gon: n lines, n rotational order

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Questions students ask

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Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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