3D shapes (three-dimensional shapes) are shapes that have length, width, and height. Unlike 2D shapes, 3D shapes have depth, which means they take up space in the real world.
We see 3D shapes every day—in food, buildings, toys, and household objects.
What Are the Three Dimensions?

- Length – how long an object is
- Width – how wide an object is
- Height – how tall an object is
Common 3D Shapes
These are the most common 3D shapes you will see in daily life.
- Cube
- Cuboid
- Cylinder
- Cone
- Sphere
- Pyramid
- Hemisphere
Examples of common 3D shapes:
- A dice is shaped like a cube.
- A brick is a cuboid.
- A soda can is a cylinder.
- An ice cream cone has the shape of a cone.
- A football is almost a perfect sphere.
- The pyramids in Egypt are famous pyramids.
- Half of an orange is a hemisphere.
Advanced 3D Shapes
These shapes are more common in geometry, science, and engineering.
- Triangular prism
- Hexagonal prism
- Pentagonal prism
- Tetrahedron
- Octahedron
- Dodecahedron
- Icosahedron
- Torus
- Ellipsoid
Examples of advanced 3D shapes:
- A camping tent often looks like a triangular prism.
- A wooden pencil is shaped like a hexagonal prism.
- Some modern buildings use a pentagonal prism design.
- A pyramid with four triangular faces is a tetrahedron.
- Two pyramids joined at the base form an octahedron.
- A dodecahedron has twelve flat faces.
- An icosahedron has twenty triangular faces.
- A donut has the shape of a torus.
- An egg is similar to an ellipsoid.
Basic Properties of 3D Shapes
- Faces – flat surfaces
- Edges – lines where two faces meet
- Vertices – corner points
Simple Practice Sentences
- The box is shaped like a cube.
- This bottle is a cylinder.
- The ball rolled across the floor because it is a sphere.
- The ice cream melted on the cone.
Last Updated on January 28, 2026




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