Yes providing the cross section remains the same
Prisms, regular polyhedra.
Prisms.
Prisms.Prisms.Prisms.Prisms.
They are prisms.
Yes if it didn't it wouldn't be a prism.
Prisms, regular polyhedra.
Prisms.
No. Their "bases" are at right angles to the rectangles connecting the bases.
Prisms.Prisms.Prisms.Prisms.
They are prisms.
When a base is congruent it is the same shape and size, and parallel is when they will never touch. Therefore, on a square the top and bottom are congruent parallel bases. Some other examples are: Cylinders, rectangular prisms, and of course parallelograms.
Yes if it didn't it wouldn't be a prism.
Prisms are classified according to the shape of the two congruent and parallel plane shapes which form its bases.
2
the difference between a pyramid and prism (in geometry) is that a pyramid has one base and lateral faces that are triangles where prisms have two congruent bases and lateral faces that are parallelograms
They are prisms. The bases may be any polygons with three or more sides.
... whereas one of the "bases" of prisms are vertices.