A cylinder is one example.
It is a prism with non-polygonal bases. The bases simply be two identically shaped "blobby" shapes.
A non polyhedron with 0 bases is a sphere.
No but it has congruent base angles. Also it has: One pair of parallel sides Non-parallel sides that are equal Two pairs of equal angles Diagonals that are equal
No, an isosceles trapezoid does not have four congruent sides. An isosceles trapezoid has a pair of parallel sides (the bases) and the non-parallel sides (the legs) are of equal length, but the lengths of the bases are generally different. Thus, it has only two pairs of congruent sides, not four.
Yes the non parallel sides of an isosceles trapezoid are congruent
It is a prism with non-polygonal bases. The bases simply be two identically shaped "blobby" shapes.
A non polyhedron with 0 bases is a sphere.
No but it has congruent base angles. Also it has: One pair of parallel sides Non-parallel sides that are equal Two pairs of equal angles Diagonals that are equal
No, an isosceles trapezoid does not have four congruent sides. An isosceles trapezoid has a pair of parallel sides (the bases) and the non-parallel sides (the legs) are of equal length, but the lengths of the bases are generally different. Thus, it has only two pairs of congruent sides, not four.
Yes the non parallel sides of an isosceles trapezoid are congruent
It will be in the form of an isosceles trapezoid
Its diagonals are congruent. One set of parallel sides. The other two non parallel lines are congruent.
A non-example of a prism is a sphere. Unlike prisms, which have two parallel, congruent bases and flat polygonal faces, a sphere is perfectly round and has no edges or vertices. Other non-examples include shapes like cones and pyramids, which also do not meet the criteria of having two parallel bases.
An isosceles trapezoid
An isosceles triangle.
When two of its non-parallel sides are congruent
when its two non-parallel sides are congruent