Line symmetry — introduction

Line symmetry — introduction

Line symmetry

Fold a butterfly along a straight line down its middle and the two wings land exactly on top of each other. Fold a heart, a maple leaf, the letter M — the two halves match. That straight line is called an axis of symmetry (or "line of symmetry"), and a shape that has one is line-symmetric.

axis ↕
butterfly axis ↕

The fold test

The easiest way to check whether a shape is line-symmetric is the paper-fold test:

  1. Cut the shape out of paper.
  2. Fold it along a straight line.
  3. If the two halves fit on top of each other perfectly — same outline, no gaps, no overhang — the fold is an axis of symmetry.

If you can't find a fold where the halves match, the shape has no axis of symmetry. Lots of everyday objects have no symmetry — a hand, a number 4, the letter F.

What an axis of symmetry does

An axis of symmetry acts like a mirror.

  • Every point on one side has a partner on the other side.
  • Both partners are the same distance from the axis.
  • The line that joins them crosses the axis at a right angle.

This is why we sometimes call the axis a mirror line — looking at one half is exactly like looking at the other half in a mirror.

Some shapes have more than one axis

ShapeNumber of axes
scalene triangle0
isosceles triangle1 (down the middle)
equilateral triangle3 (from each vertex to the opposite side)
rectangle2 (horizontal and vertical)
square4 (2 across the middle + 2 diagonals)
regular pentagon5
circleinfinitely many (every diameter is an axis)

A regular polygon with n sides has n axes of symmetry. The more sides, the more axes — until a circle has so many that every diameter works.

⚠️ The two diagonals of a rectangle are not axes of symmetry, unless the rectangle happens to be a square. Many children get this wrong because the diagonal cuts the rectangle in half — but the two halves don't match when you fold along it.

What you will learn

Try it out