The answer depends on the dimensions of the shape. Plane shapes - flat shapes in 2-dimensional space - will have the same number of vertices as sides. However, that is not the case with solid shapes.
No, unless all its sides are equal in length, but that's the only time.
A shape with four sides and three vertices does not exist in Euclidean geometry. In Euclidean geometry, a shape must have the same number of sides as vertices. Therefore, a shape with four sides would have four vertices.
2 side 2 corners and same lenght
regular shape is a shape that has same sides irregular shape is a shape that has diffrent sides
an irregular shape
A polygon is a shape in which every site is a line segment. It can have any number of sides and any number of angles, but always has the same number of sides as it has angles..
A crystal is a polyhedral shape. The number of faces (which means the same thing as sides) depends on the crystal.
A kite or arrowhead.
It's a shape with many sides where all the sides are the same length.
Assuming that each vertex is used to connect exactly two sides, all two-dimensional shapes will have the same number of sides as vertices. So a shape with 4 sides will have 4 vertices and a shape with 3 sides will have 3 vertices. Think of a square (4 sides, 4 vertices) and a triangle (3 sides, 3 vertices).
it is called a isosceles shape if iT only has 2 sides that have the same exact length