By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Tell apart a point, line, line segment, and ray
  • 2Identify 2D shapes by sides and corners
  • 3Identify 3D shapes by faces, edges, and corners
  • 4Match everyday objects to their shapes
  • 5Make pictures using the seven tangram pieces
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Why this chapter matters
Geometry helps children see and describe the shapes all around them. Learning points, lines, flat (2D) shapes, solid (3D) shapes, and tangrams builds spatial reasoning used in art, design, building, and later maths.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Geometry — Shapes, Lines, and Tangrams

1. Basic Geometric Ideas

Point:

A POINT is an EXACT location. It has NO size.

'We show a point with a DOT and name it with a letter: ● A'

Line:

A LINE is a straight path that goes on FOREVER in both directions.

Line Segment:

A LINE SEGMENT is a part of a line with TWO endpoints.

'You can MEASURE a line segment with a ruler.'

Ray:

A RAY has ONE endpoint and goes on FOREVER in ONE direction.

'The SUN'S rays start at the sun (endpoint) and travel in one direction!'

TermEndpointsPicture
PointNone
LineNone (goes forever both ways)
Line SegmentTwo●—●
RayOne●—⟶

2. 2D Shapes (Flat Shapes)

Two-dimensional shapes have LENGTH and WIDTH but NO thickness.

Circle:

  • A CLOSED curve with all points the SAME distance from the centre.
  • NO corners. NO sides.

'The wheel of a bicycle is a CIRCLE. A coin is a CIRCLE.'

Square:

  • 4 EQUAL sides.
  • 4 corners (right angles).
  • All sides are the SAME length.

'A chess board is made of SQUARES. A Rubik's Cube has square faces.'

Rectangle:

  • 4 sides — OPPOSITE sides are EQUAL.
  • 4 corners (right angles).

'A DOOR is a rectangle. A BOOK is a rectangle.'

Triangle:

  • 3 sides and 3 corners.
  • Can be different shapes — some with equal sides, some with different sides.

'A pizza slice looks like a TRIANGLE. A sandwich cut diagonally makes triangles.'

ShapeNumber of SidesNumber of Corners
Circle0 (curved)0
Square4 (equal)4
Rectangle4 (opposite equal)4
Triangle33

3. 3D Shapes (Solid Shapes)

Three-dimensional shapes have LENGTH, WIDTH, and DEPTH (or height).

Cube:

  • 6 square faces (ALL equal).
  • 12 edges.
  • 8 corners (vertices).
  • 'A DICE is a cube. A SUGAR CUBE is a cube.'

Cuboid:

  • 6 rectangular faces (opposite faces equal).
  • 12 edges.
  • 8 corners.
  • 'A BRICK is a cuboid. A BOOK is a cuboid.'

Sphere:

  • 1 curved surface.
  • NO edges. NO corners.
  • 'A BALL is a sphere. A GLOBE is a sphere.'

Cylinder:

  • 2 flat circular faces (top and bottom).
  • 1 curved surface.
  • 'A COLD DRINK CAN is a cylinder. A CANDLE is a cylinder.'

Cone:

  • 1 flat circular face (base).
  • 1 curved surface.
  • 1 point (vertex) at the top.
  • 'An ICE CREAM CONE is a cone. A PARTY HAT is a cone.'
Solid ShapeFacesCornersEdges
Cube6 squares812
Cuboid6 rectangles812
Sphere1 curved00
Cylinder2 circles + 1 curved02
Cone1 circle + 1 curved11

4. Tangrams

A TANGRAM is an ancient Chinese puzzle made of 7 pieces (called TANS).

'The 7 tans are: 5 triangles (2 large, 1 medium, 2 small), 1 square, and 1 parallelogram.'

Rules of Tangram:

  1. Use ALL 7 pieces.
  2. Pieces must NOT overlap.
  3. Pieces can be ROTATED or FLIPPED.

Shapes You Can Make:

  • Animals (cat, dog, bird, fish)
  • People (running, dancing, sitting)
  • Objects (house, boat, candle, letter)
  • Numbers and letters

'Tangrams help you understand how shapes FIT TOGETHER. They are great for CREATIVE THINKING!'

Activity Idea:

Try making a SQUARE using ALL 7 tangram pieces. It is TRICKIER than it looks!


5. Common Mistakes

  1. Confusing 2D and 3D shapes: 'A square is FLAT (2D). A cube is SOLID (3D). They are DIFFERENT!'
  2. Calling a cuboid a cube: 'A cube has ALL equal sides. A cuboid has different lengths for length, width, and height.'
  3. Thinking a circle has sides: 'A circle has NO sides — it is a SINGLE CURVED line.'
  4. Confusing edges and faces: 'An EDGE is where TWO faces meet. A FACE is a FLAT surface. A cube has 6 faces and 12 edges.'

6. Key Facts to Remember

  • 'A point has NO size — it is just a location.'
  • '2D shapes are FLAT — circle, square, rectangle, triangle.'
  • '3D shapes are SOLID — cube, cuboid, sphere, cylinder, cone.'
  • 'A square has 4 EQUAL sides. A rectangle has OPPOSITE equal sides.'
  • 'A sphere has NO edges and NO corners.'
  • 'Tangrams use 7 pieces to make many shapes.'

7. Self-Test

Q1: Draw and name a shape with 4 equal sides and 4 corners.

Q2: How is a square different from a rectangle?

Q3: Name a 3D shape that has 6 square faces.

Q4: How many edges does a cube have?

Q5: Name a 3D shape with NO edges and NO corners.

Q6: What is the difference between a line and a line segment?

Q7: How many pieces does a tangram have?

Q8: What shape is a party hat?

Answers:

A1: A SQUARE (4 equal sides, 4 right-angle corners). A2: A square has ALL 4 sides equal. A rectangle has OPPOSITE sides equal. A3: A CUBE. A4: 12 edges. A5: A SPHERE (like a ball). A6: A line goes on forever in BOTH directions. A line segment has TWO endpoints and can be measured. A7: 7 pieces (5 triangles, 1 square, 1 parallelogram). A8: A CONE.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Lines
Line goes forever both ways; segment has 2 endpoints; ray has 1 endpoint
A line segment can be measured with a ruler.
Solid shapes
Cube: 6 faces, 8 corners, 12 edges; Sphere: 1 curved face, 0 edges, 0 corners
An edge is where two faces meet.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing 2D and 3D shapes
A square is flat (2D); a cube is solid (3D).
WATCH OUT
Calling a cuboid a cube
A cube has all equal sides; a cuboid has different length, width, and height.
WATCH OUT
Saying a circle has sides
A circle is one curved line with no straight sides and no corners.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· 2D Shapes
How is a square different from a rectangle?
Show solution
A square has all four sides equal; a rectangle has only opposite sides equal.
Q2EASY· 3D Shapes
How many edges does a cube have?
Show solution
12 edges.
Q3EASY· Lines
What is the difference between a line and a line segment?
Show solution
A line goes on forever in both directions; a line segment has two endpoints and can be measured.
Q4EASY· Tangram
How many pieces does a tangram have?
Show solution
7 pieces (5 triangles, 1 square, 1 parallelogram).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • A point shows a location and has no size.
  • A line goes forever; a segment has two endpoints; a ray has one.
  • 2D shapes are flat: circle, square, rectangle, triangle.
  • 3D shapes are solid: cube, cuboid, sphere, cylinder, cone.
  • A square has 4 equal sides; a rectangle has opposite sides equal.
  • A sphere has no edges and no corners.
  • A tangram has 7 pieces used to make many shapes.

ICSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks, depending on the school paper

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
2D shapes / Lines3-42Naming shapes and basic geometric terms
3D shapes / Tangrams3-42Faces, edges, corners, and tangram puzzles
Prep strategy
  • Count sides and corners for each 2D shape
  • Learn faces, edges, and corners for each solid
  • Match objects at home to their shapes
  • Play with a tangram set to build shapes

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Everyday objects

Boxes, balls, cans, and cones are 3D shapes we use daily.

Art and design

Tangrams and shapes are used in patterns, logos, and drawings.

Building

Knowing shapes helps in construction and packing.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. State the number of sides and corners for 2D shapes
  2. Give faces, edges, and corners for 3D shapes
  3. Use the correct geometric word (segment, ray, edge)
  4. Give an everyday example for each shape

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Make a square using all seven tangram pieces.
  • Find five cuboids and five cylinders in your home.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

ICSE Class 3 School ExamHigh
Maths Olympiad / IMO (junior)Medium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

A 2D shape is flat and has only length and width, like a circle, square, or triangle drawn on paper. A 3D shape is solid and also has depth or thickness, so you can hold it, like a cube, ball, or cone. For example, a square drawn on paper is 2D, but a dice, which has square faces, is a 3D cube. The simplest way to remember is that 2D shapes are flat and 3D shapes are solid.

On a solid (3D) shape, a face is a flat surface, an edge is the line where two faces meet, and a corner (also called a vertex) is the point where edges meet. A cube, for example, has 6 flat square faces, 12 edges where the faces join, and 8 corners. Counting these helps us describe and tell apart different solid shapes.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 30 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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