Edges are the lines that connect the vertices. The vertices are the actual points where the edges meet.
12 edges, 8 vertices
12 vertices and 18 edges.
6 edges, 4 vertices.
Faces: 10 Vertices: 16 Edges: 24
Edges are the lines that connect the vertices. The vertices are the actual points where the edges meet.
There are four each. The difference is zero.
Faces + Vertices = Edges + 2 its easy
A square has four edges, one face (assuming the "back" does not count), and four vertices. A cube has 12 edges, six faces (assuming the "inside" does not count), and eight vertices.
5 vertices and 8 edges.5 vertices and 8 edges.5 vertices and 8 edges.5 vertices and 8 edges.
No. Edges join vertices; or, put another way, edges meet at vertices.
A triangular based pyramid has 4 faces, 6 edges and 4 vertices whereas a square based pyramid has 5 faces, 8 edges and 5 vertices
A heptahedron has 7 faces. It can have 6 vertices and 11 edges, or7 vertices and 12 edges, or8 vertices and 13 edges, or9 vertices and 14 edges, or10 vertices and 15 edges.
Each cube has 6 faces, 12 edges and 8 vertices, so two [unconnected] cubes have 12 faces, 24 edges and 16 vertices (between them).
A prism with an n-sided base will have 2n vertices, n + 2 faces, and 3n edges.
A point would have neither edges or vertices
In a polyhedron, there are edges, faces, and corners. The thing that is similar, or common, between the edges, faces, and corners are the vertices.