A hexahedron in the form of a hpae with six quadrilateral faces.
Somewhat more regular versions are a rhombohedron, a parallelepiped or a cuboid with the cube being the regular version.
were two or more faces of a solid figure
A cube has eight vertices and six faces (think of a die!).
Rectangular Prism
The solid figure having eight vertices is the hexahedron. A cube, which has six faces (classifying it as a hexahedron) as well as the eight vertices, is a regular hexahedron. It is doubtless the best example of this category of geometric shapes. A link can be found below for more information, and some drawings to really help lock in the idea.
Any sort of prism.
A vertex is the name of a corner on a solid where three or more faces meet (plural = vertices).
Dodecahedron.
edge.
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 vertex is the point where three or more edges of a solid figure 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.