A triangular prism and a pentagonal based pyramid would fit the given description.
There is not such thing as a three-dimensional triangle. You are thinking of a tetrahedron which is a three-dimensional figure with each side being a triangle. This has four vertices.
A triangular prism has 5 faces and 6 vertices. At each vertex it has three plane angles - making 18 two-dimensional angles.
A polygon with three vertices and three sides is a triangle. A polygon with four vertices and four sides is a quadrilateral.
A pyramid is constructed from a square base (having four corners) and four triangles, rising from each side of the square with their tips meeting at one point. These five two-dimensional shapes form the faces of the three-dimensional shape of the pyramid, that therefore has five vertices (at the four corners of the square and at the point where the triangles meet).
You get the Volume by using formulas. There is usually a specific formula to find the volume of each shape. Some irregular shapes may not have a formula.
A three dimensional rhombus has four vertices and one face. The four vertices are of equal length, and oppose each other.
There is not such thing as a three-dimensional triangle. You are thinking of a tetrahedron which is a three-dimensional figure with each side being a triangle. This has four vertices.
Rectangles are 2-dimensional figures- they lie in a plane- they have four vertices There really is no such thing as a 3D rectangle. If you mean a rectangular prism, it has 8 vertices, 4 on each of its two parallel faces.
A triangular prism has 5 faces and 6 vertices. At each vertex it has three plane angles - making 18 two-dimensional angles.
A pyramid being 3 dimensional figure would have four vertices at the bottom and one vertice at the top.
A polygon with three vertices and three sides is a triangle. A polygon with four vertices and four sides is a quadrilateral.
A pyramid is constructed from a square base (having four corners) and four triangles, rising from each side of the square with their tips meeting at one point. These five two-dimensional shapes form the faces of the three-dimensional shape of the pyramid, that therefore has five vertices (at the four corners of the square and at the point where the triangles meet).
You get the Volume by using formulas. There is usually a specific formula to find the volume of each shape. Some irregular shapes may not have a formula.
A tetrahedron is a 3 dimensional shape bounded by 4 triangular faces. It has 4 vertices and six edges. Three faces meet at each vertex so that the shape is self-dual.
3. Vertices is another word for angles.A triangle has three sides and therefore three vertices, or angles. Vertices are corners, so a triangle has three corners, thus three vertices.3Vertices is another term for angles.three 3; a vertice is where the two lines intersect A triangle has 3 vertices. It also has three angles and sides.A triangle has 3 vertices at each of its 3 corners
A point is 0-dimensional ... it has no length, breadth or height. A line is 1-demensional ... it has length, but no breadth or height. A square, circle, triangle etc is 2-dimensional ... each of them have length and breadth, but no height A cube, cylinder, sphere etc is 3-dimensional ... each of them have lenght, breadth and height.
A pentahedron is a closed 3-dimensional shape with five faces, each of which is a polygon.It can have 5 vertices and 8 edges (quadrilateral based pyramid) or 6 vertices and 9 edges (triangular prismoid).