Each cone has only one base so there is nothing for it to be congruent with!
No but a cylinder does have 2 parallel bases
The base of a cone or cylinder is a circle. It the radius is r then the base area B=Pi(r2)
A cylinder has two bases that are circles but a cone only has one base then a vertex.
The Base.
they both have a round and flat base
The answer would be a right cylinder. A right cylinder is a cylinder that has a closed circular surface having two parallel bases on both the ends and whose elements are perpendicular to its base.
They are both geometric shapes. Both of the shapes has circles as their base.
No, it is not. For a cone, think of a standard ice-cream cone shape (or a witches hat) - a circular top OR base (but not both), which has sides coming off that taper into a point. Whereas a cylinder has a circular top AND base, (like the shape of baked bean cans), with sides joining both top and base.
Each cone has only one base so there is nothing for it to be congruent with!
No. A prism has congruent bases (top and bottom). A cone has a base and a point on top.
No but a cylinder does have 2 parallel bases
If the area of the base and the height of the cylinder and the cone are the same, then the volume of the cone will always be one third of the volume of the cylinder.
The base of a cone or cylinder is a circle. It the radius is r then the base area B=Pi(r2)
A cylinder has two bases that are circles but a cone only has one base then a vertex.
A cylinder has two bases that are circles but a cone only has one base then a vertex.
If you mean a curved base then it can be a cone or a cylinder