Want this question answered?
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.
... whereas one of the "bases" of prisms are vertices.
what is the difference between a paramid and a prism
they are not sometimes prisms
Prisms have polygons as bases whereas cylinders have circles as bases. In a way, a cylinder is like a circular prism.
They depend on radius rather than perimeter.
There is prisms and pyramids. There are also spheres and cylinders
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.
pyramids are prisms. * * * * * Pyramids are not prisms nor are prisms pyramids. A pyramid has one polygonal base. Each side of that polygon is connected to a triangle, whose third vertices meet at a point above the base of the pyramid. A prism has two congruent polygonal bases that are parallel to one another. They are joined together by rectangles.
... whereas one of the "bases" of prisms are vertices.
cones are similar to pyramids because they come to a point, also known as the vertex. Cones and pyramids are also conic. Cylinders are similar to prisms because their base, no matter what shape, will translate (slide) all the way up the middle to the top. Basically, their 2 bases should always always always be congruent. Prisms and cylinders are also cylindric.
Both pyramids and prisms are three dimensional. Both of them have polygon faces. Another thing common about pyramids and prisms is that they have a base and faces.
what is the difference between a paramid and a prism
they are not sometimes prisms
what are the differences between truncated square prism and frustrum cylinder
Prisms have polygons as bases whereas cylinders have circles as bases. In a way, a cylinder is like a circular prism.
i am not sure.