An octahedron, for example. 8 faces, 6 vertices.
check a reference book
No. A cube has 6 faces and 8 vertices - it has exactly 2 more vertices than faces.
In geometry and trigonometry, an angle (in full, plane angle) is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint, called the vertex or vertex of the angle (vertices in plural).With solid figures, like pyramids or polyhedrons, a vertex is a corner where three or more of the faces meet.Remember,* faces are the flat sides.* Edges are the lines where two of the faces meet.* Vertices are the corners where three or more of the faces meet.
A cube has 8 vertices and 6 faces. Therefore a cube has 2 more vertices than faces.
Oh, dude, that's an easy one. A shape like a cube has more faces than vertices. Like, think about it, a cube has 6 faces but only 8 vertices. So, yeah, the faces totally outnumber the vertices in that situation.
The number of vertices does not determine the number of faces. If the shape with 6 vertices was a quadrilateral based bipyramid, it would have 8 faces. A hexagonal based pyramid has 7 vertices and 7 faces. So more vertices does not necessarily imply more faces.
A cube is a geometric shape which has 6 faces and 8 vertices ie .2 more vertices than faces
Bipyramids are a class of polyhedra with more faces than vertices.
Polyhedrons are three-dimensional shapes with flat faces, straight edges, and sharp corners, known as vertices. Examples of polyhedrons include cubes, pyramids, prisms, and dodecahedrons. These shapes have a closed surface and are made up of polygons, which are two-dimensional shapes with straight sides.
A cube has eight vertices and six faces (think of a die!).
Shapes that have more than six faces include polyhedrons such as the cube, which has six square faces, and the octahedron, which has eight triangular faces. Additionally, shapes like the dodecahedron have twelve pentagonal faces, and the icosahedron has twenty triangular faces. These shapes are examples of polyhedrons with more than six faces.
Four or more place polygonal faces. Four or more vertices. Six or more edges. Faces + Vertices = Edges + 2