It is a prismoid - a prism-like solid whose lateral faces are not perpendicular to the bases.
It is a prismoid - a prism-like solid whose lateral faces are not perpendicular to the bases.
It is a prismoid - a prism-like solid whose lateral faces are not perpendicular to the bases.
It is a prismoid - a prism-like solid whose lateral faces are not perpendicular to the bases.
It is a prismoid - a prism-like solid whose lateral faces are not perpendicular to the bases.
A parallelogram or trapezoid.No!A parallelogram or a trapezoid are polygons (2-dimensional). A polyhedron, or 3-dimensional object, with parallel congruent bases is a prism.A prism. To give it fuller description, an "n-gonal prism" where the "n-gon" refers to the 2-d name of the bases.
Both a cylinder and a prism can have parallel and congruent bases.
A Prismthe faces are called bases
A Prism
cylinder
It is a skew prism. If the parallelograms are rectangles then it is a right prism.
A prism has two congruent parallel bases.
Prism, which a polyhedron with two congruent and parallel faces (the bases) and whose lateral faces are parallelograms.
A rectangular prism has congruent bases and parallelograms as lateral surfaces.
a circle * * * * * A circle is not even a polyhedron! The correct answer is a prism.
Prism, which a polyhedron with two congruent and parallel faces (the bases) and whose lateral faces are parallelograms.
A cylinder is one example.
A prism.
When a base is congruent it is the same shape and size, and parallel is when they will never touch. Therefore, on a square the top and bottom are congruent parallel bases. Some other examples are: Cylinders, rectangular prisms, and of course parallelograms.
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A cylinder would fit such a description of it.
It is a prism. More specifically, "A solid figure that has two bases that are parallel, congruent polygons and with all other faces that are parallelograms." This describes the general prism. Replace "polygons" with "triangles" and you have specified a triangular prism.