It is false.
It is false. If it has a triangle as its base it would be a pyramid.
No, a cone is not a Platonic solid. The Platonic solids are the five regular polyhedra: tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, and icosahedron.
Assuming that you mean not (p or q) if and only if P ~(PVQ)--> P so now construct a truth table, (just place it vertical since i cannot place it vertical through here.) P True True False False Q True False True False (PVQ) True True True False ~(PVQ) False False False True ~(PVQ)-->P True True True False if it's ~(P^Q) -->P then it's, P True True False False Q True False True False (P^Q) True False False False ~(P^Q) False True True True ~(P^Q)-->P True True False False
True. A cone is a three-dimensional geometric shape formed by connecting a circular base (disk) to a single point (the apex) that is not in the same plane as the base. The surface of the cone consists of all the line segments connecting the apex to the points on the circular base.
false
FALSE.
False apex
False. Every cross-sectional shape of a cone is not congruent.
It is false. If it has a triangle as its base it would be a pyramid.
false!
No, a cone is not a Platonic solid. The Platonic solids are the five regular polyhedra: tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, and icosahedron.
False
False
Anonymous stop being a jerk it was true
falsethe answer is NOT false its TRUE!
false
Wrong, it's True. (Apex)