There is no such thing as a 3-dimensional triangle. A triangle is a 2-dimensional figure. So, depending on what you mean exactly, the volume can vary. In the case of a pyramid - whether it has a triangular base, a rectangular base, or any other base - the volume is (1/3) Bh, that is, 1/3 times the area of the base times the perpendicular height.
There is none because a triangle is a 2D shape -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- There is not one. Triangles are two dimensional, volume is three dimensional, a triangle can therefore have an area but not a volume.
There is not one. Triangles are two dimensional, volume is three dimensional, a triangle can therefore have an area but not a volume.
There is none because a triangle is a 2D shape and volume measures 3D shapes ----------------------------------------------------------------- There is not one. Triangles are two dimensional, volume is three dimensional, a triangle can therefore have an area but not a volume.
A rectangle has no volume, it is a 2 dimensional object.
There is not one. Triangles are two dimensional, volume is three dimensional, a triangle can therefore have an area but no a volume.
A triangle is a two-dimensional shape, so it doesn't have volume. The formula for area of a triangle is 1/2bh where b=base and h=height.
A triangle is a 2-dimensional object. It has no volume but the volume of an triangular prism is ( volume=Length*width*height ) as well ever since.
There are none because volume only relates to 3 dimensional shapes and not 2 dimensional shapes as in the question.
A semi-circle is a 2-dimensional figure and so cannot have a volume.
A triangle is a 2 dimensional object, it doesn't have a volume.
There is not one. Triangles are two dimensional, volume is three dimensional, a triangle can therefore have an area but not a volume.
we dont know