There are infinitely many possible solutions. The question needs to be more specific.
There are infinitely many possible solutions. The question needs to be more specific.
There are infinitely many possible solutions. The question needs to be more specific.
There are infinitely many possible solutions. The question needs to be more specific.
base is for 2d shapes and area of base is for 3d shapes
sqaure base pyramid
The 3D shapes that have at least one square face are known as prisms. Prisms are polyhedrons with two parallel and congruent faces called bases, and lateral faces that are parallelograms. When one of the bases of a prism is a square, it is called a square prism. Other examples of prisms with a square face include rectangular prisms and cube-shaped prisms.
here are some: 2d shapes- square circle triangle Rectangle 3d shapes- cone cuboid cube prism
A pyramid has 1 square base.
There're are 3d shapes
Cube Cuboid Sqaure-based Pyramid
Yes you can draw the nets of 3D objects on graph paper
2. One at the top and one at the bottom. The face that is cylindrical cannot be counted as a base because it is curved - in 3D shapes the base must be flat.
The 3D shapes that have all their faces equal to their base are known as regular polyhedra. Specifically, these include the tetrahedron (4 triangular faces), cube (6 square faces), octahedron (8 triangular faces), dodecahedron (12 pentagonal faces), and icosahedron (20 triangular faces). Each of these shapes features congruent faces that exhibit symmetry.
A pyramid (3D)! Some examples: - triangular base pyramid - square base pyramid - rectangular base pyramid - cone
only if it is in a certain shape, although the 3d shape would not look exactly like the 2d one, take this, if a square were to be turned into a square, it would have to be extended, but if you were to do this it would just stay as a 2d square, in a 3d world, but if it were a net (like the t cube) then yes, it would be able to become 3d