it would be impossoble 2 name them all... i can say a lot
3-d shapes are not made from 2-d shapes. 3-d shapes may have projections onto a plane that are 2-d.
2-D shapes are all named "polygon", in honor of the lost parrot of Plato. 3-D shapes are all named "polyhedron", in honor of the memorable 3-D shape of their cousin Tippi.
There are infinitely many 3-D shapes so it is not possible to name them individually.
3 dimensional shapes have breadth, width and depth whereas 2 dimensional shapes have only breadth and width
Polyhedrons
3-d shapes are not made from 2-d shapes. 3-d shapes may have projections onto a plane that are 2-d.
2-D shapes are all named "polygon", in honor of the lost parrot of Plato. 3-D shapes are all named "polyhedron", in honor of the memorable 3-D shape of their cousin Tippi.
There are infinitely many 3-D shapes so it is not possible to name them individually.
There are many 3-D shapes (including ones that don't have names). Here are the commonly known 3-D shapes in general: -hemisphere -cube -cuboid -tetrahedron -cylinder -octahedron -cone -prism -sphere -pyramid -dodecahedron
3 dimensional shapes have breadth, width and depth whereas 2 dimensional shapes have only breadth and width
Polyhedrons
-hedra.
Triangular based pyramid with no bottom. That is, if you meant 3-D shapes, presumably?
Yes, there are 4-D shapes, also known as four-dimensional polytopes or "polychora." Just as 3-D shapes are defined in three spatial dimensions, 4-D shapes extend this concept into a fourth dimension. While we cannot directly visualize four dimensions, we can represent 4-D shapes mathematically or through projections into 3-D space, similar to how a 3-D object casts a 2-D shadow. Examples include the hypercube (or tesseract) and the 24-cell.
circles and ovals In 3-D, spheres and oblate spheroids
No because isosceles triangles are 2 dimensional shapes.
There are infinitely many such shapes. There are infinitely many such shapes. There are infinitely many such shapes. There are infinitely many such shapes.