It is a three dimensional figure of some sort.
A cube
A pyramid with a square base.
Length, Width, Height. Faces, Corners and sides.
In the common use of the phrase "geometric solid", the answer is three. In advanced mathematics, dimensions greater than three are also studied. In many cases, the name of a plane (two-dimensional) figure has the ending "-gon" as in "hexagon", while the name of a solid figure (three dimensional) has the ending "-hedron" as in tetrahedron.
Yes, it does exist.
A Solid ... such as a sphere or a cube.
There is no such thing. A hexagon is a two dimensional figure. A three dimensional figure with six vertices is an octahedron.
Three dimensional objects would be a sphere, cube, pyramid, cylinder, cones, etc. Anything with a width, height, and depth is three-dimensional.
i dont no
It is a three dimensional figure of some sort.
A geometric shape having three dimensions e.g. width, length, and depth.
A cube
A pyramid with a square base.
A hexahedron is a three-dimensional geometric shape having six sides; a hexagon is a two-dimensional six-sided shape.
In geometry three-dimensional shapes are solid figures or objects or shapes that have three dimensions length, width, and height. Unlike two-dimensional shapes, three-dimensional shapes have thickness or depth. A cube and cuboid are examples of three-dimensional objects, as they have length, width, and height.
The line or plane upon which a geometric figure is thought of as resting is called the base. A three-dimensional figure with a circular base and the top meeting at a vertex; it resembles a funnel cone.