No, a cube is a cube and a rectangular prism is a rectangular prism. They are two different shapes.
A cube is a rectangular prism in which each edge is of the same length.
A cube is different to a rectangular prism because in a cube all the edges have to be equal in length, where's in a rectangular prism the edges can be of various lengths.
No. It is a parallelopiped. And, if it is a right rectangular prism then it is a cuboid.
A cube cannot be a rectangular prism, as the cross section of this prism would be a rectangle, as opposed to a square. A square prism (if that is what it is called) could be a cube, but is not necessarily.
No, a cube is a cube and a rectangular prism is a rectangular prism. They are two different shapes.
A cube is a special case of a rectangular prism. If each edge of a rectangular prism were of the same measure, then it would be a cube.
A larger rectangular prism.
A cube is like a square and a rectangular prism is like a rectangle.
A cube is a specialized form of a rectangular prism.
Yes. A cube is a special case of a rectangular prism.
A cube is a rectangular prism in which each edge is of the same length.
No No Cube is squarishe while a rectangular prism is longer on all the faces
A cube is different to a rectangular prism because in a cube all the edges have to be equal in length, where's in a rectangular prism the edges can be of various lengths.
A building would be a perfect example. If you simplify the details of a building, it becomes a rectangular prism. If you specifically mean a "square" prism, that would be a cube, an example of which would be a Rubik's Cube or a few dice.
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A cube is a type of rectangular prism because every square is a rectangle.