If it is a polyhedron, then four or more faces and four or more corners.
In a polyhedron, there are edges, faces, and corners. The thing that is similar, or common, between the edges, faces, and corners are the vertices.
a cube, for example
A triangular dipyramid - two triangular pyramids stuck together, base-to-base.
5 corners and 5 faces 5 corners and 5 faces
A polyhedron is any 3D solid (such as a cube) - therefore, it can have any number of faces.
There is no simply connected polyhedron with the above characteristics.
5 faces 9 edges 6 corners
5 faces, 5 corners.
A pyramid whose top is a line (forming 2 corners) instead of a point (1 corner).The 5 faces are1 bottom2 triangles for opposite sides2 trapezoids for opposite sidesThe 6 corners are4 at the base2 at the topI do not know of a name specific to this kind of polyhedron.
A pyramid has 5 faces, 5 corners and 8 edges corners and faces are always the same
A polyhedron with 5 faces is a square based pyramid