10cm2
It looks like a comb stuck at the top of an 8 foot tall stick
It depends on whether they are stuck together so as to form a 1x1x6 cuboid or a 1x2x3 cuboid, or a 1x1x2 cuboid on top of a 1x2x2 cuboid. Each of these will give a different answer.
im pretty sure its 2 trees stuck or grown together
Two tetrahedron stuck together by a face.
The idiom "stick together" (support one another, be loyal) is based on the verb to stick meaning "to adhere" (the same as glue or tape) although the individuals are not actually stuck together.
Brick is stuck together using mortar.
because the Irish wanted to fight them and the Germans were scared so they always stuck together
It is called interlocking, where two objects become entwined or stuck together after a collision.
The past tense of "stick out" is "stuck out."
The past participle of "stick" is "stuck."
The past participle for "stick" is "stuck."
In the past a "stick" was part of a plant and this "stick" was "stuck" onto the plant.
The past tense of "stick" is "stuck" and the past participle is also "stuck."
Take a pin and stick it in the hole
Sticking, stuck, stick.
"Stick/sticks" is the present tense of "stuck". They stick their forks into the tough meat. He sticks his fork into the tough meat. "Stuck" is the past tense. He stuck his fork into the tough meat.