if you mean common: one of the triangle, square, and pentagon vertion of pyramid, dipyramid, and gyrolongated dipyramid. a total of 9.
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hexagon, square
square and hexagon
There are many, but the infinitely many types of prisms are probably the simplest.
A 3D shape with 200 sides is known as a "icosahedron" if it has triangular faces, but specifically, a 200-sided polyhedron is called a "icosahedral" or "200-gon." It can also be referred to as a "200-faced polyhedron" if it has polygonal faces. While regular polyhedra with 200 faces are complex and less commonly encountered, they can be constructed mathematically and can vary in shape and properties based on the types of faces used.
Any polygon can be a face of a polyhedron.
It is a hexahedron. There are several types of hexahedron, one of which is the cube. One having 6 triangular faces is a triangular dipyramid.
There are five regular polyhedra, also known as the Platonic solids. They are three-dimensional shapes where all of the faces are made up of the same regular polygon.They are:Tetrahedron with four faces (this one is like a pyramid, but with an equilateral triangle for the base and all of the faces)Cube with six faces (all squares)Octahedron with eight faces (all equilateral triangles)Dodecahedron with 12 faces (all regular pentagons)Icosahedron with 20 faces (all equilateral triangles)A square pyramid (like the Egyptian pyramids) is not a regular polyhedron, because it has two different types of regular polygons for faces.
One face that is the equilateral triangle.One face that is the equilateral triangle.One face that is the equilateral triangle.One face that is the equilateral triangle.
triangles, squares and pentagons.
Polyhedra are three-dimensional shapes with flat faces, straight edges, and sharp corners. They have vertices (corner points), edges (line segments where faces meet), and faces (flat surfaces that make up the shape). The properties of a polyhedron include its number of faces, edges, and vertices, as well as the types of faces that make up the solid.
Triangle (tetrahedron, octahedron, icosahedron) Square (cube) Pentagon (dodecahedron)