They have 8 vertices, 12 edges and 6 faces. All edges meet at right angles. All faces meet at right angles. Every face is a rectangle (a square is a rectangle). The three vertex-to-opposite-vertex diagonals meet at a point which is the centre of gravity. This point bisects the diagonals.
a vertex
It is a corner: a point where three of more faces meet.
In a 3-dimensional shape with polygonal faces, an edge is a straight line at which two faces meet. A vertex is a point where three or more edges meet. In solid shapes which are not polyhedra, an edge is still a line - possibly curved - where two faces meet. But a vertex can be any corner, for example, the point of a cone.
A point where three (or more) faces (sides) meet.
The fixed point at the intersection of all the faces of the pyramid is called the VERTEX of the pyramid.
They have 8 vertices, 12 edges and 6 faces. All edges meet at right angles. All faces meet at right angles. Every face is a rectangle (a square is a rectangle). The three vertex-to-opposite-vertex diagonals meet at a point which is the centre of gravity. This point bisects the diagonals.
a vertex
It is a corner: a point where three of more faces meet.
Three dimensional objects have edges, vertices and faces. A face is a plane surface which forms a boundary of the shape. Two faces meet along a line which is an edge. Three or more faces meet at a point which is a vertex.
In a 3-dimensional shape with polygonal faces, an edge is a straight line at which two faces meet. A vertex is a point where three or more edges meet. In solid shapes which are not polyhedra, an edge is still a line - possibly curved - where two faces meet. But a vertex can be any corner, for example, the point of a cone.
it is a triangular pyrimid
A point where three (or more) faces (sides) meet.
That sounds like a square-based pyramid.
A hexagonal pyramid has 6 triangular faces that meet at a point. It has 6 triangles and 1 hexagonal base.
A solid figure with a polygonal base and triangular faces that meet at a common point.
No, pyramids of any kind will never have any parallel faces. This is because all of the faces, excluding the base, must meet at a single point.