yes
No a hexagonal pyramid has a base of a octagon and six triangles. (:
Both have at least one hexagonal face (base) ?
A hexagonal pyramid has 7 faces: 1 hexagonal base and 6 triangular lateral faces. The triangular faces intersect at the apex of the pyramid, and each triangular face shares an edge with the hexagonal base. Therefore, the number of intersecting faces in a hexagonal pyramid can be considered as the 6 triangular faces intersecting at the apex.
A hexagonal prism has 2 hexagon faces and a hexagonal pyramid has 1 hexagonal face.
A hexagonal prism has 2 hexagon faces and a hexagonal pyramid has 1 hexagonal face.
No, a hexagonal prism does not have the same number of vertices as a hexagonal-based pyramid. A hexagonal prism has 12 vertices, with 6 on the top face and 6 on the bottom face. In contrast, a hexagonal pyramid has 7 vertices: 6 at the base and 1 at the apex. Thus, the two shapes differ in their vertex counts.
The 7-faced solid is called a "hexagonal pyramid."
Both have at least one hexagonal face (base). Both have six faces that are topologically equivalent (either rectangles, or triangles).
hexagonal pyramid
pentagonal prism
They are both polyhedra. Both have at least one hexagonal face. A 6-pyramid has only one hexagonal face, a 6-prism has 2. A 6-pyramid has only 7 face, a 6-prism has 8. A 6-pyramid has only 12 edges face, a 6-prism has 18. A 6-pyramid has only 7 vertices, a 6-prism has 12.
No its not. The base still counts as a face, so you'd have seven faces, not six. I believe it would be a septahedron.