a hexagon
Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).
A Triangle
Any shape with two or more vertices can have one or more pairs of equal angles. The simplest of these is a symmetric lenticular shape with just two vertices.
None. A shape with four faces is a tetrahedron and that has 4 vertices, not 6.
a hexagon
There is no polygonal shape which has exactly those angles. It is possible for a concave polygon with 6 or more vertices to have the given angles.
A pentagon
No. An octagon has 8 vertices. A hexagon is the shape that has 6 vertices.
A star is not a specific shape: it is a generic word for a shape which has an even number of vertices. The interior angles at alternate vertices are usually reflex angles. A star can have six or more vertices.
There is no polygonal shape which has exactly those angles. It is possible for a concave polygon with 6 or more vertices to have the given angles.
A hexagon has 6 sides and 6 vertices.
a shape with 7 vertices
It has 6 sides, 6 vertices and 6 interior angles that add up to 720 degrees
Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).Vertices and angles are the same thing. Any polygon has an equal number of sides and vertices (and, therefore, angles).
A triangular prism is an example of a shape with 6 vertices. (e.g. a Toblerone bar)
A Triangle