6
A pentagonal prism has 7 sides : 5 side faces and 2 bases.However, if all sides of the prism are considered faces, a shape with5 total faces including the 2 bases is a triangular prism.
A general prism has two congruent polygonal bases (faces), while the other faces are parallelogrammatic; a right prism is so-called when the general prism's remaining faces are rectangular.An example of a right prism with two congruent rectangular bases is a cube if all other faces are equal to the bases; a cuboid prism is where the other faces are equal to each other but not necessarily to the bases.
The three-dimensional shape that has 2 octagons and 8 rectangles is called a truncated octagonal prism. A truncated octagonal prism is a polyhedron with 10 faces, including 2 octagonal faces and 8 rectangular faces. The octagonal faces are the bases of the prism, while the rectangular faces are the lateral faces that connect the bases.
In its most generalised form it comprises two connected, congruent and parallel faces: these faces are called the bases. In a right prism, the bases are at right angles to the length of the prism. In a polyhedral prism, all faces are polygons and, in such a case, the faces joining the bases are quadrilaterals. In the very special case of a right polyhedral prism, the bases are polygons and the lateral faces are rectangles.
triangular prism
A pentagonal prismoid. If the lateral faces were rectangles, it would be a pentagonal prism.
A pentagonal prism has 7 sides : 5 side faces and 2 bases.However, if all sides of the prism are considered faces, a shape with5 total faces including the 2 bases is a triangular prism.
Sometimes,only because,a rectangular prism has two bases and four faces, but a triangular prism has two bases and three faces.
A prism *always* has 2 bases. In case you meant "faces" instead of "bases", the prism with the smallest number of faces is the triangular prism - which has 5 faces. If there were any fewer number of faces, the prism which become a two dimensional object.
Oh, dude, you're almost there! A prism actually has 2 bases and 3 faces. The bases are the flat surfaces at the top and bottom, and the faces are the sides that connect those bases. So, like, close but not quite!
A prism whose bases are parallelogram
A general prism has two congruent polygonal bases (faces), while the other faces are parallelogrammatic; a right prism is so-called when the general prism's remaining faces are rectangular.An example of a right prism with two congruent rectangular bases is a cube if all other faces are equal to the bases; a cuboid prism is where the other faces are equal to each other but not necessarily to the bases.
The three-dimensional shape that has 2 octagons and 8 rectangles is called a truncated octagonal prism. A truncated octagonal prism is a polyhedron with 10 faces, including 2 octagonal faces and 8 rectangular faces. The octagonal faces are the bases of the prism, while the rectangular faces are the lateral faces that connect the bases.
A prism whose bases are parallelogram
All six of them.
All six of them.
In its most generalised form it comprises two connected, congruent and parallel faces: these faces are called the bases. In a right prism, the bases are at right angles to the length of the prism. In a polyhedral prism, all faces are polygons and, in such a case, the faces joining the bases are quadrilaterals. In the very special case of a right polyhedral prism, the bases are polygons and the lateral faces are rectangles.