answersLogoWhite

0

How is a pyramid like a cone?

Updated: 10/27/2022
User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Best Answer

A cone is a pyramid in its limit - when the base has infinitely many vertices.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How is a pyramid like a cone?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How is a pyramid alike from a cone?

A pyramid and a cone are alike because they are both are like in the same shape.


What thing shaped like a cone?

PYRAMID


What is like a pyramid but its base is a circle?

A cone ?


Explain how a pyramid and a cone are alike and different?

a pyramid and a cone are alike because they both have a flat side on the bottom and they can slide. they are different because a pyramid has 5 flat sides on the sides and 1 flat side on the bottom part. a cone can roll but a pyramid can't roll like the cone.


Is a cone a pyramid or a prism?

A cone is a common pyramid-like figure where the base is a circle or other closed curve instead of a polygon. A cone has a curved lateral surface instead of several triangular faces, but in terms of volume, a cone and a pyramid are just alike.


How are a cone and a pyramid alike?

Start with a regular tetrahedron (triangular based pyramid). As you increase the number of sides in the base of the pyramid, the shape becomes more and more like a right cone. In the limit, the base tends to a polygon with an infinite number of sides - a circle, and the pyramid tends to a right cone.


How is a pyramid different from a cone?

A cone has a round bottom, and the pyramid has a squarish bottom.


How are cone and a pyramid different?

A cone has 1 face a pyramid has 4 faces.


How is a square pyramid like a cone?

the are flat on the bottom and tappered at the top


Does a cone have to have a vertex?

Yes, that's one of the things that makes it a cone. Just like a pyramid has a vertex as well.


Is a cone is pyramid?

No


How do you find the volume of a circle based pyramid?

Wouldn't a circle-based pyramid look a lot like a cone ? If so, you could probably use the formula for the volume of a cone and get away with it.