becasue its the house of the Eucharist.
tabernacle
The Tabernacle was also known as the Tent of Meeting.
a tent? a block of cheese?
A roughly cone shaped tent.
The 'tabernacle' sometimes refers to the 'tent of meeting' and sometimes to the actual tabernacle which was within the tent of meeting (which can cause confusion if one is equating the two). Within the walls of the tent of meeting were the altar of burnt offering, the bronze 'sea' (a big old basin of water resting upon 12 bronze, outward facing bulls), and, of course, the covered tabernacle consisting of two rooms, the holy place, wherein only priests were allowed to go in daily to offer incense on the altar of incense, light the gold lampstand, or put out the showbread. The back room of the tabernacle was segregated from the front by a veil, and only the High Priest was allowed to enter through that veil, and then, only on the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) to make atonement for Israel. So if by the tabernacle you meant the tent of meeting, the answer is that only male Israelites could enter the tent of meeting wherein the tabernacle was located - we see this in the first chapter of Leviticus, where a layman was instructed to bring his burnt offering to the north side of the altar of burnt offerings, and slay it, skin it, and cut it up there. It was the priests who then took these and offered them on the altar. The laymen however, could not (under penalty of death) enter the tabernacle - nor could the Levites. Of course when the tabernacle was moved, the holy items within were covered, and the tent taken down - so that when the (covered) ark of the covenant etc. were made visible, they were no longer in the tabernacle (for it was taken down first) - thus a Levite could carry the ark out of where it was sitting without actually entering the tabernacle.
a tp
Children's play tents are usually pyramind shaped. However some play tents or play tent houses can be cube shaped as well.
some decorative household items, roofs on some houses, pyramids, pencil points, tent, and crayon points are in the shape of triangular prisms
The book of Exodus ends with the completion of the Tabernacle and the glory of the Lord filling it. Moses then enters the Tabernacle to speak with the Lord, symbolizing the presence of God among the people of Israel.
A bell tent is a tent with a bell-like shape.
Tepee
That is a frame tent as opposed to a pole tent. The tent has an interior ceiling that looks like an "A" frame much like what you would see in the attic of a home.