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).
A square or a rectangle.
chloe
4 sides and 4 vertices
A square has 4 sides and 4 vertices.
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).
A shape with four sides has four vertices and a shape with three sides has three vertices, so a shape with four sides has more vertices than a shape with three sides.
i belive you ment vertices not verticles the shape with 4 sides and 4 vertices is a tetrahedral
A 4 sided shape has 4 vertices whereas a 3 sided shape has 3 vertices.
There is no such shape.
A geometric shape with 4 sides and 4 vertices is a 4-sided figure, a quadrilateral.
A shape with four sides and three vertices does not exist in Euclidean geometry. In Euclidean geometry, a shape must have the same number of sides as vertices. Therefore, a shape with four sides would have four vertices.
Shape has fewer than 6 sides
need to see a pic of a shape with 4 sides and 3 vertices can you supply one
A 4 sided shape which is a quadrilateral has more vertices than a 3 sided shape which is a triangle
A shape which has 4 sides and 4 vertices is called a quadrilateral. It could be a square, rectangle, parallelogram, rhombus, trapezium etc.
Since the number of sides and vertices is different, it cannot be a 2-dimensional shape. The only 3-dimensional shape with 4 vertices is a tetrahedron and that does not have 6 sides. Consequently, there is no such shape.