The only regular 3D shapes I can think of with 5 faces are the square-based pyramid and the triangular prism (which is shaped like a Toblerone bar).
There are 5. They are the tetrahedron (4 triangular faces), the cube (6 square faces), the octahedron (8 triangular faces), the dodecahedron (12 pentagonal faces), and the icosahedron (20 triangular faces).
You probably mean the Platonic Solids, they are the only five shapes constructed from the same faces.
Spheres have no faces.
1. triangular prism it has 2 triangular faces. 2.triangular base pyramid, it has 5 triangular faces. 3. square base pyramid, it has 4 triangular faces.
A geometric solid has ... 50 solids! What does that mean?
There are 5. They are the tetrahedron (4 triangular faces), the cube (6 square faces), the octahedron (8 triangular faces), the dodecahedron (12 pentagonal faces), and the icosahedron (20 triangular faces).
You probably mean the Platonic Solids, they are the only five shapes constructed from the same faces.
There are no regular solids with an odd number of sides and therefore no regular solids with 5 faces. For this reason there is no give name, as such, for a 5 faced solid. There are however non-regular solids which have 5 faces, such as a square pyramid and a triangle cylinder.
Spheres have no faces.
1. triangular prism it has 2 triangular faces. 2.triangular base pyramid, it has 5 triangular faces. 3. square base pyramid, it has 4 triangular faces.
Many solids have no rectangular faces, including such forms as the hexagonal pyramid and the regular octahedron.
There (not their) are 5 platonic solids.
A geometric solid has ... 50 solids! What does that mean?
Assuming that "equal ladder" is meant to be equilateral, the answer is a tetrahedron, one of the 5 Platonic solids.
It has 5 faces
sphere
cubes