A CPU (the box next/under to your computer)...hope that helped...
If you mean by real life examples, then take a standard tissue box. (No, not the cube-shaped one.) Then there's a book, although its rectangles are not the same all around.
A headstone can be a rectangular pyramid.
Prisms: Feed troughs, bathtubs, and boxes. Pyramids: Pyramids of Egypt and the Aztecs. Cylinders: Cans, pistons, tubes, and pipes. Cones: Ice cream cones, funnels, and the bottom part of a water tower.
corners of most buildingssides of picture framessides of rectangular windowscorners of kitchen refrigerators and stoves
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If you mean by real life examples, then take a standard tissue box. (No, not the cube-shaped one.) Then there's a book, although its rectangles are not the same all around.
A headstone can be a rectangular pyramid.
One of the examples of a real-life pyramid is the Great Pyramid of Giza.
like those of a rectangular window
Prisms: Feed troughs, bathtubs, and boxes. Pyramids: Pyramids of Egypt and the Aztecs. Cylinders: Cans, pistons, tubes, and pipes. Cones: Ice cream cones, funnels, and the bottom part of a water tower.
corners of most buildingssides of picture framessides of rectangular windowscorners of kitchen refrigerators and stoves
There are very few real life examples of nonagons. The only examples that I can think of are a few coins.
some real life examples are a water bottle, pipes, cans
In my openion bubbles in the soap film is the real examples of it.
ATOMS are real life examples of atoms. They do exist.
A real life example of a coast is in Mississippi
Anything that involves liquid and space does not evolve with height.Some uses of volume in daily life are:-Pouring cement into a rectangular box for big slabs.Figuring out how much liquids to mix into something.Cooking - measuring cups.