A square.
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).
Yes,all of the sides of a polygon are the same shape.
Each has 6 flat sides and 8 vertices. The sides of a cube are all the same. The sides of a rectangular prism are not the same sometimes.
All triangles have 3 sides and 3 vertices.
All quadrilaterals have four sides and four angles, as well as four vertices.
None.But all polygons have the same number of sides as vertices.
Yes,because when you count the sides angles and vertices it's all the same
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).
No. All of a square's sides are the same size.
Yes,all of the sides of a polygon are the same shape.
Each has 6 flat sides and 8 vertices. The sides of a cube are all the same. The sides of a rectangular prism are not the same sometimes.
All triangles have 3 sides and 3 vertices.
I guess you mean with ALL sides the same size it's an equilateral triangle
Not necessarily. If all sides are the same size, and all angles are also the same, then it is called a "regular octagon". But an irregular octagon is still an octagon - the only requirement is that it have 8 sides.
All triangles have 3 sides and 3 vertices
Four straight sides, all in the same plane, meeting pairwise at four vertices.
A square.