it has one vertex two circle edges and one face
A cone has 1 face, 0 edges, and one vertex. The face is the circular flat area. The cone can roll, so it has no edges. Edges have to be straight. The vertex is the pointy thing opposite to the face.
one face one vertex and two circle edges * * * * * What kind of cone is that? It has 1 edge, 2 faces (one curved and one plane), and 1 vertex.
If you mean a cone then it has a flat base face and a circular face with one edge and one vertex
No, a shape cannot have more than 3 edges meeting at a vertex and simultaneously have a right angled face. A right angled face implies that two edges form a right angle, which is only possible with three edges meeting at a vertex.
it has one vertex two circle edges and one face
A cone has 1 face, 0 edges, and one vertex. The face is the circular flat area. The cone can roll, so it has no edges. Edges have to be straight. The vertex is the pointy thing opposite to the face.
one face one vertex and two circle edges * * * * * What kind of cone is that? It has 1 edge, 2 faces (one curved and one plane), and 1 vertex.
It has eight edges, five faces, and one vertex.
One possible answer is an infinite cone. Spheres have one face but no vertex. No physical 3-D shape can have a vertex without having more than one face (a real cone typically has two: side and bottom).
If you mean a cone then it has a flat base face and a circular face with one edge and one vertex
cone
No, a shape cannot have more than 3 edges meeting at a vertex and simultaneously have a right angled face. A right angled face implies that two edges form a right angle, which is only possible with three edges meeting at a vertex.
Edges: 8 Faces: 5 Vertices: 5
A teardrop-shape would have one vertex (the tip), one edge and one face
An infinite cone.
The shape that is commonly known as a cone has two faces, one vertex and one edge. Mathematically, however, the cone has infinite height and so has one [curved] face and one vertex.