It's called, not altogether surprisingly, a hexagonal prism. If the bases were hexagons and the other faces were triangles, it would be a hexagonal antiprism.
Yes, it could be.
No polyhedron has five sides as a pentagon and a hexagon has six sides
a rectangular prism
a hexagonal prism
A polyhedron with rectangular bases and parallelogram faces is known as a rectangular prism, or cuboid. In this shape, the two opposite faces are rectangles, while the remaining four faces are parallelograms, specifically rectangles in the case of right rectangular prisms. This polyhedron has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices.
hexagonal prism
Hexagonal prism
Yes, it could be.
write a real answer
A hexagonal prism
No polyhedron has five sides as a pentagon and a hexagon has six sides
a rectangular prism
a hexagonal prism
a hexogonal prism
a hexagonal prism
A polyhedron with rectangular bases and parallelogram faces is known as a rectangular prism, or cuboid. In this shape, the two opposite faces are rectangles, while the remaining four faces are parallelograms, specifically rectangles in the case of right rectangular prisms. This polyhedron has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices.
A polyhedron with lateral faces that are rectangles is a prism. In a prism, the two bases are congruent polygons, and the lateral faces are formed by connecting the corresponding vertices of the bases with rectangular faces. The specific type of prism is named based on the shape of its bases, such as triangular prism, rectangular prism, or pentagonal prism.