There is no straightforward shape. The numbers given in the question contradict the Euler characteristic of simply connected polyhedra.
A cone !
its called a face an edge is called en edge a point is called a vertex
A face is the flat surface of an object (2 or 3 dimensional). An edge is when two sides (faces) meet on an object. A vertex is the corner of an object, where an angle exists between two or more lines.
There is no such shape.
A cone.
One possible answer is an infinite cone. Spheres have one face but no vertex. No physical 3-D shape can have a vertex without having more than one face (a real cone typically has two: side and bottom).
No, a shape cannot have more than 3 edges meeting at a vertex and simultaneously have a right angled face. A right angled face implies that two edges form a right angle, which is only possible with three edges meeting at a vertex.
-5
In a 3-dimensional shape with polygonal faces, an edge is a straight line at which two faces meet. A vertex is a point where three or more edges meet. In solid shapes which are not polyhedra, an edge is still a line - possibly curved - where two faces meet. But a vertex can be any corner, for example, the point of a cone.
There is no such shape. If anyone can prove otherwise, I'd be grateful if they'd let me know.
A cylinder does not have vertex but it has two circular edges and 3 faces
A cone