Group by Symmetry: Worksheet 2 - Beginner Practice Group by Symmetry BEGINNER

Ready to master Group by Symmetry? This entry level practice worksheet (2/10) presents 20 beginner-level challenges. Focus area: pattern recognition. Learn to solve group by symmetry reasoning questions, handle group by symmetry practice, and perfect group by symmetry for competitive exams with our step-by-step solutions.

📝 Worksheet 2 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Beginner level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Group by Symmetry
Worksheet 2 of 10 (11% complete)

Question 1

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCBFEAD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 2

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBDAC
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 3

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBDCA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 4

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterEDFACB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 5

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCBAD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 6

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDCAB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 7

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterABCD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 8

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCABDFE
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 9

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterFABECD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 10

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterADCB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 11

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterABCD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 12

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBADC
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 13

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDFBECA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 14

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBDCA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 15

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterEDBAFC
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 16

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDAFBEC
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 17

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDCBA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 18

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterEADFCB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 19

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterECADBF
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 20

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBCDA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.
Previous Worksheet Next Worksheet