There are special names for shapes that have three dimensions, just like how we name shapes that are flat or 2D.
Imagine you're playing with building blocks, those colorful ones you stack up to make towers and houses. The simple block you hold in your hand is a 3D shape called a cube. It has length, width, and height, all three dimensions!
What Makes a Shape 3D?
A 2D shape, like a piece of paper or a square drawn on the floor, only has two dimensions: length and width. You can’t pick it up and move it around in space, it’s flat.
But when you add height, that makes it three-dimensional! So, if you take a square and lift it up to make a cube, or roll out a circle to make a cylinder (like a can of soda), now it has three parts: length, width, and height. These are the 3D shapes.
You see 3D shapes everywhere, like your toy boxes, balls, and even cookies! 🍪
Examples
Ask a question
See also
- How Does Everything About Circle Theorems - In 3 minutes! Work?
- How Does Describing 2D Shapes Work?
- How Does Merging 3D Shapes – How I Finally Got It Work?
- What are check the angles?
- What are black and white squares?