A hexagon, a triangular prism, a pentagonal pyramid, two-quadrilateral pyramids attached by their quadrilateral faces are some options. Take your pick!
A hexagon...
No, not all three-dimensional shapes have vertices. A vertex is an angle point of any shape. Spheres do not have vertices.
Yes, they can have sides and vertices.
Vertices = Corners
yes they are
A hexagon...
Any smooth shape has no vertices.
No, not all three-dimensional shapes have vertices. A vertex is an angle point of any shape. Spheres do not have vertices.
No. A sphere has no vertices. An octohedron has six vertices.
Most Shapes has many vertices & Sides. The answer is a '''Circle''' * * * * * Only partly true. Most '''WELL-STUDIED''' shapes have vertices and sides. Most shapes - in nature, for example, are irregular, "random" shapes.
Yes, they can have sides and vertices.
Shapes that have fewer than 5 vertices include triangles (3 vertices), quadrilaterals such as squares and rectangles (4 vertices), and circles (0 vertices, as it is defined by its center point). These shapes are classified based on the number of corners or points that define their boundaries. Shapes with fewer vertices are typically simpler in structure and have fewer sides.
Vertices are the points where edges meet and form an angle.
Vertices = Corners
An hexagon is a polygon that has six sides and six vertices.
There is no such thing as a polyhedon hexagon.A regular hexagon will tessellate and so it forms a plane (2-D) surface, not a 3-D shape. A 3-D shape with six faces is a hexahedron and this could be a triangular bipyramid with 5 vertices, a parallelepiped with 8 vertices, a pentagonal pyramid with six vertices. There are also other possible shapes.
yes they are