It the circular face is uniform along it's length then the shape is a cylinder.
A cone
All solid figures must have a face. The face need not be planar, but there must be at least one which forms the boundary between the solid and the rest of the universe.This is somewhat an issue of semantics. A sphere has no edges so some would not say the term face applies to it at all. It does have a surface and you can certainly define that as its face. The point being, it depends on how you define "faces" and it may depend on your context as well.
Two three-dimensional shapes that have at least one triangle as a face include a triangular prism and a pyramid. In a pyramid, the outer faces are triangles, and they come together at one point. A triangular prism is a type of prism with a triangular base.
Yes as for example a cube has 6 faces and each face has 4 right angles of 90 degrees.
A cylinder and a cone. If you look up 'space figure' in images you should get the idea.
Cube and pyramid
A circle * * * * * On the right lines but a circle is not a solid figure. How about a sphere?
Circle
It the circular face is uniform along it's length then the shape is a cylinder.
pyramid
A cone
All solid figures must have a face. The face need not be planar, but there must be at least one which forms the boundary between the solid and the rest of the universe.This is somewhat an issue of semantics. A sphere has no edges so some would not say the term face applies to it at all. It does have a surface and you can certainly define that as its face. The point being, it depends on how you define "faces" and it may depend on your context as well.
Two three-dimensional shapes that have at least one triangle as a face include a triangular prism and a pyramid. In a pyramid, the outer faces are triangles, and they come together at one point. A triangular prism is a type of prism with a triangular base.
Most don't, e.g. a cube or a sphere
Yes as for example a cube has 6 faces and each face has 4 right angles of 90 degrees.
a fish with a circle face