The lines of symmetry for each letter are as follows:
The formal date of when J was created remains unknown. What we do know is that in the 17th century, I and J were distinguished from each other and then began to be used commonly in the English language.The letter J is the 10th letter in the alphabet.
the last letter addded to the English alphabet was j the last letter addded to the English alphabet was j
J has never been the last letter of the Alphabet.
The letter that is midway between J and P in the alphabet is M. J is the 10th letter, and P is the 16th letter, making M the 13th letter, which is exactly in the middle.
In Latin, there is no J. Latin uses the letter I instead.
The letter J has no lines of symmetry. It does not exhibit symmetry along the vertical, horizontal, or diagonal axes. Each side of the letter is distinctly different in shape, preventing any line of symmetry from being drawn.
none
no
j
If you are using lower case letters, the only letter with exactly two lines of symmetry (out of a b c d e f g h y o u j k l) is l.c and k have one line of symmetry.o has many, many lines of symmetry.H has two lines of symmetry (but lowercase h has none).A B D E Y and U all have one line of symmetry.
No. Examples of shapes without lines of symmetry include a scalene triangle, a parallelogram, the capital letters F and J.
the numbers tht do not have line of symmetry are f ,g,j,l,n,p,q,r,s,,x,z.
Four. F, G, J, L
Q r f g j l p
CAPITAL LETTERS: F, G, J, N, P, Q, R, S, Z these may or may not have: B, K, L small letters: a, b, d, e, f, g, h, j, k, p, q, r, s Note: db and qp can have a line of symmetry between the letters
Possibly the letters with no lines of symmetry.
ALL letters have at least one line of rotational symmetry. However - if you mean reflective symmetry, the letters F, G, J, L, P, Q, R, S, & Z do not.