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two dimensional : A term used to describe plane figures in which only the length and with can be measured. Shapes are on a flat surface or plane; there is no thickness.
three dimensional : A term used to describe figures having length, with and depth.
rectangular prism : A space figure with two parallel congruent rectangles as its bases.
right pyramid : A solid figure with one face a polygon (the base) and the other faces being triangles that all share the same vertex.
triangular prism : A polyhedron with two parallel, congruent polygons which are triangles being its base and all the other faces being parallelograms.
plane : A flat surface that can extend forever in length and width but has no thickness. The surface of a calm sea and a flat valley are all physical models of a plane.
intersect : The point at which lines or curves meet.
surface area : The sum of areas of all the faces of a solid figure.
cube : A solid figure that has six square faces.
base : The plane (or area) on which a solid object stands. Generally the base refers to the lower face.
nets : A flat plane that can be folded to form a solid.
formula : An equation that expresses a mathematical relationship, principle, or rule using a set of symbols.
dimensions : Refers to those properties called length, area, and volume. A configuration having length only is said to have one dimension; Area and not volume, two dimensions; and volume, three dimensions.
square units : The area of a square each of whose sides measures one unit. It is used to measure area.
Area : The surface included within a closed figure, measured by the number of square units needed to cover the surface.
Across:1. | The point at which lines or curves meet. | 7. | A term used to describe plane figures in which only the length and with can be measured. Shapes are on a flat surface or plane; there is no thickness. | 9. | A polyhedron with two parallel, congruent polygons which are triangles being its base and all the other faces being parallelograms. | 10. | The plane (or area) on which a solid object stands. Generally the base refers to the lower face. | 11. | An equation that expresses a mathematical relationship, principle, or rule using a set of symbols. | 12. | The area of a square each of whose sides measures one unit. It is used to measure area. | 13. | A solid figure with one face a polygon (the base) and the other faces being triangles that all share the same vertex. | 14. | A flat plane that can be folded to form a solid. |
| | Down:2. | The sum of areas of all the faces of a solid figure. | 3. | A flat surface that can extend forever in length and width but has no thickness. The surface of a calm sea and a flat valley are all physical models of a plane. | 4. | Refers to those properties called length, area, and volume. A configuration having length only is said to have one dimension; Area and not volume, two dimensions; and volume, three dimensions. | 5. | A space figure with two parallel congruent rectangles as its bases. | 6. | The surface included within a closed figure, measured by the number of square units needed to cover the surface. | 7. | A term used to describe figures having length, with and depth. | 8. | A solid figure that has six square faces. |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Across:1. | The point at which lines or curves meet. | 7. | A term used to describe plane figures in which only the length and with can be measured. Shapes are on a flat surface or plane; there is no thickness. | 9. | A polyhedron with two parallel, congruent polygons which are triangles being its base and all the other faces being parallelograms. | 10. | The plane (or area) on which a solid object stands. Generally the base refers to the lower face. | 11. | An equation that expresses a mathematical relationship, principle, or rule using a set of symbols. | 12. | The area of a square each of whose sides measures one unit. It is used to measure area. | 13. | A solid figure with one face a polygon (the base) and the other faces being triangles that all share the same vertex. | 14. | A flat plane that can be folded to form a solid. |
| | Down:2. | The sum of areas of all the faces of a solid figure. | 3. | A flat surface that can extend forever in length and width but has no thickness. The surface of a calm sea and a flat valley are all physical models of a plane. | 4. | Refers to those properties called length, area, and volume. A configuration having length only is said to have one dimension; Area and not volume, two dimensions; and volume, three dimensions. | 5. | A space figure with two parallel congruent rectangles as its bases. | 6. | The surface included within a closed figure, measured by the number of square units needed to cover the surface. | 7. | A term used to describe figures having length, with and depth. | 8. | A solid figure that has six square faces. |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only