YUP
This is a cylinder. When seen from the top or bottom it is a circle. From any side view (360°) it looks like a rectangle. There are special cases of other solids that appear like this but the cylinder is the most common. Traneengineer, Rocklin, CA
A circle with a triangle at the top
The top view of a cylinder is a circle, the side views would be a rectangle.
circle and rectangle. circle for the top and a curled rectangle with length equal to the circumference of the circle for the side.
Altitude is the height of a shape. The point where all altitudes of a closed shape meet is called the orthocenter. To FIND an altitude rest one flat side of the shape on the "ground" and measure straight up to the point furthest from the ground. In other words, measure at a right angle from the line segment forming one side across to a line segment or vertex on the opposite side. Example: Altitude of a square, measure any side -- the altitude of the "top" is the same height as any other side, since all sides are at right angles and the distance from the bottom to the top is the same anywhere on the square.
A cylinder which the length of the tube is equal to to diameter of the circle.
A cone.
Cone shaped
a cone . . . . I imagined Metaknight but that's up to you.
why you like math it's boring
Well it depends if you look at it from the top it is a circle if you look at it from the side it is a rectangle.
A circle.
A right circular cone could probably do that.
It is a shape that is like a toothpaste tube which has a circular lid which is the same size as the tube below it.
Measure the distance from top left corner of square (or top right) to the bottom right corner of square( or bottom left) to get the diameter of the circle. Then calculate the circumference from that figure.
This is a cylinder. When seen from the top or bottom it is a circle. From any side view (360°) it looks like a rectangle. There are special cases of other solids that appear like this but the cylinder is the most common. Traneengineer, Rocklin, CA
A Cone