Yes, here is a link to a picture of a butterfly: http://twistedphysics.typepad.com/cocktail_party_physics/images/butterfly.jpg
A. Butterfly
Take a picture of a butterfly and you will have your answer. Butterflies have an exoskeleton, meaning that their "skin" is their skeleton.
Generally speaking, one wing of a "normal" butterfly is the same as the other, only it appears as the "reverse" or "reflection" of the first wing. That makes the shape symmetrical, and in that light, yes, a butterfly with its wings spread is a symmetrical shape.
I have an authorized print of this picture by Dali and it is called Barco Papillon.
Well.......... try to picture an ant with butterfly wings...... it would look at lot alike wouldn't it.
Table skirting is available in a number of different styles. One of the most popular designs is the picture of butterflies.
There is no known butterfly species named Americana Exotica. Butterflies are typically classified under scientific names, so it may be that the common name you are referring to is different from its official scientific name.
It will become a butterfly. It will become a moth.
the viceroy butterfly is a butterfly that mimics the monarch butterfly
· Yellow Angled Sulfur Butterfly · Yellow Tip Butterfly
a small butterfly a small butterfly
a butterfly ballot is a ballot in the shape of a butterfly