a giant or small cone
A sphere that has been sliced by a plane will have a circular base and a curved surface. In the special case that this plane goes through the centre of the sphere, the shape will be a hemisphere. in simple terms it would actually be a cone...
A sphere sliced by a plane; or a cone.
A cone.
cone
Yes, a cylinder has both curved and flat surface. Considering a solid cylinder standing on its end, the circular base and the circular top are flat surfaces. The surface connecting the top and bottom is curved.
The shape of the face on a cone is a circular base at the bottom and a curved surface that narrows smoothly to a point called the apex. This curved surface is referred to as the lateral face of the cone. Overall, a cone has one circular face (the base) and one curved surface.
A cone.
The shape with one circular base and one curved surface is a cone. A cone tapers smoothly from its circular base to a single point called the apex. It is commonly found in various contexts, such as ice cream cones and traffic cones.
well.....a cone or a cylinder??
A sphere sliced by a plane, eg a hemisphere.
A sphere that has been sliced by a plane will have a circular base and a curved surface. In the special case that this plane goes through the centre of the sphere, the shape will be a hemisphere. in simple terms it would actually be a cone...
A sphere sliced by a plane; or a cone.
A paraboloid.
The solid shape you are describing is called a cone. A cone has a circular base and narrows to a single vertex, or apex, at the top. Its curved surface connects the base to the vertex, distinguishing it from other solid shapes.
It's a rectangle.
A solid figure with one circular base and one curved surface is called a cone. It tapers smoothly from the circular base to a single point known as the apex or vertex. The curved surface connects the base to the apex, creating a three-dimensional shape commonly found in various real-world objects, such as ice cream cones and traffic cones.
The shape described is a cone. A cone has a circular base and a single vertex where the curved surface converges. The surface extends from the base to the vertex, forming a pointed top. Cones can be found in various contexts, such as ice cream cones and traffic cones.