A cube.
a cube
A cube.
Yes, a cube is a polyhedron.
Since you use the term "faces" of a shape, you may be referring to polyhedra,which are three dimensional solids. There is no maximum number of faces a polyhedron can have. But for regular polyhedra (a special case where all faces are congruent regular polygons), the regular polyhedron with the most faces is the icosahedron, which has 20 faces, each of them an equilateral triangle. The most familiar regular polyhedron is the cube which has six square faces.
A cube.
A cube is a regular polyhedron, and each of the six faces of a cube is a square.
a cube
A cube.
A polyhedron is a solid with flat faces - a cube is just one of many different examples of regular polyhedra - otherwise known as platonic solids.
Yes, a cube is a polyhedron.
In geometry, an octahedron is a polyhedron with eight sides. A regular octahedron is the dual polyhedron of a cube; It is a rectified tetrahedron.
A cube could be described as a box, or as a three dimensional square.
It is not a regular polyhedron because it has unequal sides
Yes. It is one of the five regular polyhedra known from ancient Greek times or earlier.See http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~erowland/polyhedra.html .
No. It is a semi-regular polyhedron. Explanation. The truncated icosahedron is a polyhedron that can be constructed from an icosahedron with the 12 vertices truncated (cut off) such that one third of each edge is cut off at each of both ends. This creates 12 new pentagon faces, and leaves the original 20 triangle faces as regular hexagons A regular polyhedron is a polyhedron whose faces are congruent regular polygons. The truncated icosahedron is NOT a regular polyhedron, it is a semiregular polyhedron. It is a uniform polyhedron.
Since you use the term "faces" of a shape, you may be referring to polyhedra,which are three dimensional solids. There is no maximum number of faces a polyhedron can have. But for regular polyhedra (a special case where all faces are congruent regular polygons), the regular polyhedron with the most faces is the icosahedron, which has 20 faces, each of them an equilateral triangle. The most familiar regular polyhedron is the cube which has six square faces.