Fold it 10 times....
Parallelograms: 2-fold Square: 4-fold n-fold symmetries refer to rotational symmetries. Consequently, any symmetries about axes that these and other quadrilaterals may have are not relevant to this question.
Fold the paper along the line. Fold the paper again so that the first fold is folded onto itself and such that the second fold goes through a specified point - if any. The second fold will represent a line that is perpendicular to the first and which passes through the specified point.
TRUE
You can fold a right triangle how many times you want cause if your really good at folding small pieces of paper then you would be able to fold it X many times
A crosswise fold is sometimes used to change the direction of the fabric's stretch and drape, providing a different effect in the final garment. It can also be used to align patterns or to work with the fabric's design or print in a specific way.
"Fold in half crosswise" means to take an object, such as a piece of paper or fabric, and fold it so that the two shorter edges meet, creating a crease in the center. This action typically results in the item being halved along its width rather than its length. The term "crosswise" emphasizes the direction of the fold across the width rather than lengthwise.
For sewing pattern layout, folds are made along the grain line. Lengthwise center fold would be folding the fabric with selvages together. Crosswise centerfold is folding the fabric at the crosswise grain, that is along the weft threads from selvage to selvage.
A lengthwise fold is when a material or fabric is folded from one end to the other, along its longest side. This creates a crease or fold parallel to the longest edges of the material. Lengthwise folds are commonly used in sewing and crafting to create neat and uniform folds in the material.
A grain of fabric refers to the direction of the threads in the fabric. Fabrics have three grains: lengthwise grain (parallel to the selvage edge), crosswise grain (perpendicular to the selvage edge), and bias grain (45-degree angle to the lengthwise or crosswise grain). Each grain behaves differently when fabric is cut or manipulated.
Cross grain means running across the regular grain of a piece of wood.Cross grain or crosswise grain in fabrics means that the fabric grain has more stretch than lengthwise but less than bias.
Cut the cake lengthwise and then crosswise. Stack the four pieces and then cut crosswise at one third the length and again at two-thirds the length. Done!
A water-jet loom is a machine for weaving cloth (loom) which uses a jet of water to insert the weft (crosswise threads) into the warp (lengthwise threads).
In general, transverse has across as its meaning. The word longitudinal , which means along, might be a good antonym for transverse.
I got in trouble for looking at the teacher crosswise. If I get real good at crosswords, I'll be crosswise!
Transverse means crosswise direction.
It was actually one of the first punch card "computer" systems. A punch card would be inserted into the machine and it would weave accordingly. It actually took a deck of several hundred or thousand punched cards to specify one weave pattern. Each card specified the up/down positions of each of the lengthwise threads for a single pass of the crosswise thread. In other words, if a certain textile needed 2087 crosswise thread passes to create the weave pattern, a deck of 2087 punch cards was needed. Each hole in the card corresponded to on lengthwise thread.