6 rectangles an 2 hexagon * * * * * A hexagonal prism.
Yes, they will be the same size and shape as each other.
A hexagon is a plane (2-dimensional) shape and so does not have a net. There are, therefore, no rectangles.
SQUARE
8 * * * * * There is no 3-D shape made from regular hexagons. The previous answer may refer to a hexagonal prism. But that is not a 3-D hexagon: the shape has two hexagonal faces and six rectangles - not just hexagons.
rectangular prism
Squares, rectangles, and the rhombus.
You need 4 rectangles and two squares * * * * * No, you do not need to have squares: there can be six rectangles - as in a brick shape.
Two six-sided bases connected by rectangles.
Square No, in general they are six rectangles. Only in special cases would they be squares.
The Answer is the 4 long sides are rectangles and the shorter ones are squares. * * * * * The shorter ones need not be squares. All six faces can be rectangles - for example a brick or a shoebox.
Triangular prism
330سم
by measuring both rectangles
A rectangular prism is a solid (3-dimensional) object which has six faces that are rectangles. Such a shape has 8 vertices.
A 3-d shape with 6 equal faces is a cube. It has 6 squares as it's faces. A 3-d shape with 6 equal faces and only 2 squares is a rectangular prism. It has 2 squares and 4 other rectangles (squares are rectangles too) as it's faces.
The hexagonal prism has six sides that are rectangles.