yes they are!
by the way I'm really annoyed that people are putting the wrong answers on these places and guessed you are to so I have decided to tell everyone the right answers instead so you can all get everything right!!
=]
Sandy xx
This is because there is no limit on rectangualar prisms and most boxes can hold cube or rectangular prisms not triangular pyrimids or prisms or hexagonal prisms.
There are many types of prisms such as rectangular prisms,polyganic prisms crossed prisms and etc.
No, rectangular prisms are 3 dimensional and rectangles are only 2 dimensional.
what are the differences between platonic and archimedean solids? physically , naturely and features
There are 48 edges on 4 rectangular prisms.
false
A cube is the only platonic solid which is a prism.
false
There (not their) are 5 platonic solids.
They are all rectangular prisms!
In general, rectangular prisms have 8 vertices (corners). A special case of the rectangular prism is the cube, which also has 8 vertices.
The answer depends on the number. Note that the question does not require the solids to be in the form of cubiods (rectangular prisms).
Prisms are geometric solids with two parallel, congruent bases connected by rectangular or parallelogram faces. The shape of the bases determines the type of prism, such as triangular or rectangular prisms. Prisms can be classified as right prisms, where the sides are perpendicular to the bases, or oblique prisms, where the sides are slanted. Additionally, prisms refract light, causing it to bend and separate into its component colors, which is why they are often used in optics.
The book called Platonic Solids: The experience
There are different numbers on the different platonic solids.
We don't know for certain who discovered the platonic solids first. However, Pythagoras is credited by some sources as discovering the platonic solids first. Other sources credit Theaetetus as being the first to describe all five platonic solids and proving that these are the *only* platonic solids.
A polyhedron's edges can intersect at any angle less than 180. The only polyhedra to have standard angles are prisms and platonic solids.