I believe it is a cone, if you are intending for us to tell you the 3d figure.
It looks like a figure "8" turned on it's side.
It is a sphere which looks like a globe
For easy figures, you can cut up paper squares and see how many squares it takes to cover the figure. However, this takes work and if the figure is complicated, it's hard to figure out. So there's other tricks you learn to find the area of a figure, depending on what the figure looks like.
If "appears to have" allows actually has, then a trapezium or trapezoid. If "appears to have" means does not actually have but only looks as if it does then a figure with non-parallel sides, shown from some particualr perspective.
The tip of a stalagmometer can become flattened due to repeated use over time, which can lead to wear and tear on the surface of the tip. Additionally, mishandling or dropping the stalagmometer can also cause the tip to become flattened. It is important to handle and store the instrument carefully to prevent damage.
It looks like lines stuck together to make a closed figure
It's an instrument used to determine the number of drops in a given quantity of liquid.
figure is the subject can look is the verb
To read a stalagmometer, you look at the liquid level where it meets the graduated scale on the device. The liquid will form a concave meniscus, and you take the measurement at the bottom of this meniscus. The reading indicates the surface tension of the liquid in dynes per centimeter.
The computer virus cannot be seen therefore it has no figure.
Sphere.
No, a stalagmometer is not used for viscosity measurement. It is used to determine the surface tension of a liquid by measuring the time taken for a drop to fall through a capillary tube. Viscosity is typically measured using viscometers or rheometers.
I believe it is a cone, if you are intending for us to tell you the 3d figure.
By the shape...
A satyrlike figure looks similar to a faun
Rectangular prism