Fun with Symmetry — Class 4 Mathematics (CBSE)
From the current NCERT Maths Mela Grade 4 book, Chapter 11. Symmetry is the beauty of matching halves — in shapes, letters, and nature.
1. Why this chapter matters
Many things around us — leaves, butterflies, rangoli, and letters — are symmetrical. Learning about lines of symmetry and reflection helps us see patterns, draw neatly, and understand shapes better.
2. Core ideas
Idea 1 — Symmetry means matching halves
A shape is symmetrical if it can be folded so the two halves match exactly. The fold line is the line of symmetry.
Method 2 — Test by folding or with a mirror
Fold the shape, or place a mirror on the line — if the reflection completes the shape, it is symmetrical.
Skill 3 — Some shapes have more than one line of symmetry
A square has 4 lines, a rectangle has 2, a circle has many, and an equilateral triangle has 3.
3. Worked examples
Example 1: Is a butterfly shape symmetrical? How many lines?
Yes — folding down the middle makes the wings match. It has 1 line of symmetry.
Example 2: How many lines of symmetry does a square have?
4 lines (two through the middles of the sides, two along the diagonals).
Example 3: Is the letter A symmetrical? Is R?
A is symmetrical (1 vertical line). R is not symmetrical.
4. Activity corner
Fold and cut paper to make a symmetrical shape (a heart, a leaf, a butterfly). Then draw half a simple figure and complete the other half to make it symmetrical. Write:
- The shape you made and its line(s) of symmetry
- How you checked (fold or mirror)
- The maths idea (matching halves)
5. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Calling a shape symmetrical when the halves do not match. Fix: Fold or use a mirror — the halves must match exactly.
- Mistake: Thinking every shape has only one line of symmetry. Fix: A square has 4, a rectangle 2, a circle many.
- Mistake: Drawing the second half unevenly. Fix: Reflect each point the same distance on the other side of the line.
6. How to write better answers
- Decide if the shape is symmetrical (fold or mirror test).
- Draw and count the line(s) of symmetry.
- To complete a figure, reflect each part across the line.
- State your answer clearly.
7. Practice set
- What is a line of symmetry?
- How many lines of symmetry does a square have?
- How many lines of symmetry does a rectangle have?
- Is the letter H symmetrical?
- Name one object in nature that is symmetrical.
- Does a circle have one or many lines of symmetry?
8. Answer key
- The fold line where the two halves of a shape match exactly.
- 4 lines.
- 2 lines.
- Yes, the letter H is symmetrical.
- A leaf, a butterfly, or a flower (answers may vary).
- Many lines of symmetry.
9. Quick revision
- A symmetrical shape has two halves that match when folded.
- The fold line is the line of symmetry; a mirror shows the reflection.
- Square: 4 lines; rectangle: 2; circle: many; equilateral triangle: 3.
- Some shapes have no line of symmetry (like the letter R).
- To complete a figure, reflect each part across the line.
