Cubes and rectangular prisms are examples of 3D shapes that have both parallel and perpendicular edges. In a cube, each edge is parallel to another edge on the same face and perpendicular to edges on adjacent faces. Similarly, a rectangular prism has edges that run parallel along its length, width, and height, while the edges connecting different faces are perpendicular to each other. Other shapes, like some types of polyhedra, can also exhibit this property.
Spheres
They are faces such that the perpendicular distance between them is the same wherever on either face you measure it.
cylinder
A cylinder has 2 parallel circular edges
sphere
Spheres
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the geometry questions, huh? So, like, a shape that fits that description would be a triangular prism, because it has perpendicular edges but none that are parallel. It's like the rebel of the 3D shapes, just doing its own thing.
There are infinitely many shapes that do.
They are faces such that the perpendicular distance between them is the same wherever on either face you measure it.
3D shapes have edges, sides, and intersecting points
Cylinder
cylinder
Hexagonal prism has percandicular faces
A cylinder has 2 parallel circular edges
sphere
perpendicular
Cubes, cuboids, Trapezoid prisms, octahedrons