a pentgon
A pentagon is a polygon that has 5 sides, 5 vertices and a flat face
Oh, dude, a 3D pentagon has five sides and five vertices. It's like a regular pentagon, but in 3D, so it's got some depth to it. Just imagine a 2D pentagon trying to be all fancy and three-dimensional.
2-dimensional shapes, with three straight sides have three vertices.
A pentagon has 5 vertices. It is one of the few polygons that has an equal number of vertices and sides.
A 5 sided pentagon has 5 vertices
A pentagon is a polygon that has 5 sides, 5 vertices and a flat face
Oh, dude, a 3D pentagon has five sides and five vertices. It's like a regular pentagon, but in 3D, so it's got some depth to it. Just imagine a 2D pentagon trying to be all fancy and three-dimensional.
A three-dimensional pentagon does not exist as a distinct geometric shape. The term "pentagon" specifically refers to a two-dimensional polygon with five sides. In three dimensions, the closest equivalent would be a pentagonal prism, which has 10 edges, 7 faces (2 pentagonal bases and 5 rectangular lateral faces), and 5 vertices.
4 * * * * * Actually, a pentagon has 5 vertices.
Assuming you mean a pentagon - not penagon, a 3-dimensional pentagon is a dodecahedron which has 12 faces.
2-dimensional shapes, with three straight sides have three vertices.
A three dimensional rhombus has four vertices and one face. The four vertices are of equal length, and oppose each other.
There is not such thing as a three-dimensional triangle. You are thinking of a tetrahedron which is a three-dimensional figure with each side being a triangle. This has four vertices.
A pentagon has 5 sides that makes 5 vertices.
A pentagon has 5 edges and 5 vertices
A pentagon has 5 vertices. It is one of the few polygons that has an equal number of vertices and sides.
A pentagon has five vertices.