No, not all the faces of a cuboid are congruent. A cuboid has six rectangular faces, and while opposite faces are congruent, adjacent faces can have different dimensions. For example, in a rectangular prism (a type of cuboid), the length, width, and height can differ, leading to varying face sizes. Only in the special case of a cube, where all sides are equal, are all the faces congruent.
A cuboid.A cuboid.A cuboid.A cuboid.
A cuboid. Or a hexagonal prism. In fact any prism whose base has an even number of sides will have three pairs of opposite parallel congruent faces. All but the cuboid will also have other faces but the question does not exclude them.
A cuboid.
A cuboid.
Yes, a cuboid has only rectangular faces. By definition, a cuboid is a three-dimensional shape with six rectangular faces, where opposite faces are congruent and parallel. This characteristic distinguishes cuboids from other polyhedra that may have different types of faces.
A cuboid.A cuboid.A cuboid.A cuboid.
A parellelepiped (pronounced parellel pie ped) is any shape with 6 faces and 12 edges. A cuboid, also called a rectangular parallelepiped, is a parallelepiped of which all faces are rectangular. A cube is a cuboid with square faces. A rhombohedron is a parallelepiped with all rhombic faces. A trigonal trapezohedron is a rhombohedron with congruent rhombic faces. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Parallelepipede.png
A cuboid. Or a hexagonal prism. In fact any prism whose base has an even number of sides will have three pairs of opposite parallel congruent faces. All but the cuboid will also have other faces but the question does not exclude them.
cuboid
A cuboid.
A cuboid.
A rectangular cuboid would fit the given description
No.
A cuboid is formed by six rectangular faces, with each pair of opposite faces being congruent. It has twelve edges and eight vertices, and its angles are all right angles. The dimensions of a cuboid are defined by its length, width, and height, which determine the size and proportions of the shape. Essentially, a cuboid is a three-dimensional extension of a rectangle.
A cuboid, also known as a rectangular hexahedron.
A cuboid.
A cuboid would fit the given ------------------- I would call it a "box", but mathematicians might also call it a rectangular box, a rectangular cuboid, a right cuboid, a rectangular hexahedron, a rectangular parallelepiped, or a right rectangular prism.