3 faces, 2 edges, no vertices
12 edges, 8 vertices, 6 faces.
A pyramid with an n-sided base will have n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges.
Pyramid: Five faces, eight edges, and five vertices. Prism: Six faces, twelve edges, and eight vertices.
A triangularbased pyramid (tetrahedron) has 4 faces, 6 edges and 4 vertices
3 faces, 2 edges, no vertices
12 edges, 8 vertices, 6 faces.
If the closed lunch box can be approximated by a cuboid, the answer is 6 faces, 8 vertices (not verticles) and 12 edges.
A pyramid with an n-sided base will have n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges.
Pyramid: Five faces, eight edges, and five vertices. Prism: Six faces, twelve edges, and eight vertices.
6
It depends on how many cubes in the stack and what shape they form.
A triangularbased pyramid (tetrahedron) has 4 faces, 6 edges and 4 vertices
Each cube has 6 faces, 12 edges and 8 vertices, so two [unconnected] cubes have 12 faces, 24 edges and 16 vertices (between them).
A single cube has 6 faces, 12 edges and 8 vertices
A pyramid with an n-sided base will have n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges.
A cube has 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices. Four of them have 24, 48 and 32.