A prism. A triangular prism has two congruent triangles as bases, rectangular prism, pentagonal prism, etc.
They are a pair of congruent and parallel faces of a prism.
A general prism has two congruent polygonal bases (faces), while the other faces are parallelogrammatic; a right prism is so-called when the general prism's remaining faces are rectangular.An example of a right prism with two congruent rectangular bases is a cube if all other faces are equal to the bases; a cuboid prism is where the other faces are equal to each other but not necessarily to the bases.
prism
prism
No, its a triangularprism
A Base. * * * * * What? Every prism, by definition, has two congruent faces which may be called the bases of the prism.
A prism. A triangular prism has two congruent triangles as bases, rectangular prism, pentagonal prism, etc.
It can, but need not. Only a right prism must.
A triangle based prism.
The figure would be a prism. However, congruent polygons in parallel planes are called bases.
A right prism is a polyhedron that has 2 congruent faces which are sometimes called bases.
A prism has two congruent parallel bases.
They are a pair of congruent and parallel faces of a prism.
It could be called a pentahedral prism.
Both a cylinder and a prism can have parallel and congruent bases.
A general prism has two congruent polygonal bases (faces), while the other faces are parallelogrammatic; a right prism is so-called when the general prism's remaining faces are rectangular.An example of a right prism with two congruent rectangular bases is a cube if all other faces are equal to the bases; a cuboid prism is where the other faces are equal to each other but not necessarily to the bases.