It is a prism. More specifically, "A solid figure that has two bases that are parallel, congruent polygons and with all other faces that are parallelograms." This describes the general prism. Replace "polygons" with "triangles" and you have specified a triangular prism.
A prism.
None!! ha
oblique prism
The solid with two congruent pentagonal bases and sides made of parallelograms is called a pentagonal prism. In this three-dimensional shape, the pentagonal bases are parallel and connected by five rectangular faces, which are the parallelograms. This structure allows for a consistent cross-section along its height, maintaining the pentagonal shape.
Prism, which a polyhedron with two congruent and parallel faces (the bases) and whose lateral faces are parallelograms.
A rectangular prism has congruent bases and parallelograms as lateral surfaces.
A prism.
When a base is congruent it is the same shape and size, and parallel is when they will never touch. Therefore, on a square the top and bottom are congruent parallel bases. Some other examples are: Cylinders, rectangular prisms, and of course parallelograms.
None!! ha
It is a skew prism. If the parallelograms are rectangles then it is a right prism.
oblique prism
The solid with two congruent pentagonal bases and sides made of parallelograms is called a pentagonal prism. In this three-dimensional shape, the pentagonal bases are parallel and connected by five rectangular faces, which are the parallelograms. This structure allows for a consistent cross-section along its height, maintaining the pentagonal shape.
A PRISM is a solid whose side faces are parallelograms and whose ends(or bases ) are congruent parallel rectilinear figures.
Prism, which a polyhedron with two congruent and parallel faces (the bases) and whose lateral faces are parallelograms.
This is a general description of an oblique prism. Use the link to learn more.
No.
A prism has two congruent parallel bases.