Geometry and Shapes — 2D and 3D

1. Basic Geometric Terms

Point:

A POINT is an exact location. It has NO size — only position. 'Mark it with a dot and name it with a capital letter: ● A'

Line:

A LINE is a straight path of points that goes on FOREVER in both directions. 'Lines have NO endpoints. We show them with arrows on both ends: ⟷'

Line Segment:

A LINE SEGMENT is a part of a line with TWO endpoints. 'We can MEASURE a line segment. It has a definite length: ●——●'

Ray:

A RAY has ONE endpoint and goes on FOREVER in ONE direction. 'A ray starts at a point and goes in one direction: ●——⟶'

TermEndpointsLengthPicture
PointNoneNo size
LineNone (infinite)Unlimited
Line SegmentTwoFixed●—●
RayOneUnlimited in one direction●—⟶

2. Angles

An ANGLE is formed when TWO rays meet at a common endpoint (called the VERTEX).

Types of Angles:

TypeSizeLooks likeExample
Right angleExactly 90°Corner of a bookL
Acute angleLess than 90°Small, sharp corner<
Obtuse angleMore than 90°Wide, open corner> (wide)
Straight angleExactly 180°A straight line

'Check for a RIGHT angle using a set square or the corner of a notebook. If it is SMALLER, it is ACUTE. If it is BIGGER, it is OBTUSE.'


3. 2D Shapes (Plane Shapes)

TWO-DIMENSIONAL shapes have LENGTH and WIDTH but NO thickness or depth.

Circle:

  • A closed curve with EVERY point at the SAME distance from the CENTRE.
  • Radius (r): Distance from centre to any point on the circle.
  • Diameter (d): Distance across the circle through the centre. d = 2 × r

Triangle:

  • A shape with 3 SIDES and 3 ANGLES.
  • Sum of interior angles = 180°.
  • Types: Equilateral (3 equal sides), Isosceles (2 equal sides), Scalene (no equal sides).

Square:

  • 4 EQUAL sides.
  • 4 RIGHT angles (90° each).
  • Opposite sides are PARALLEL.

Rectangle:

  • 4 sides — OPPOSITE sides equal.
  • 4 RIGHT angles (90° each).
  • Opposite sides are PARALLEL.

Polygon:

A POLYGON is a closed shape made of STRAIGHT line segments.

ShapeNumber of SidesNumber of AnglesName
Triangle33Trigon
Quadrilateral44Tetragon
Pentagon55Pentagon
Hexagon66Hexagon
Octagon88Octagon

2D Shape Properties Table:

ShapeSidesCornersLines of Symmetry
Circle0 (curved)0Infinite
Triangle3 straight3Depends on type
Square4 equal straight4 (90°)4
Rectangle4 (opposite equal)4 (90°)2
Pentagon5 straight55
Hexagon6 straight66

4. 3D Shapes (Solid Shapes)

THREE-DIMENSIONAL shapes have LENGTH, WIDTH, and DEPTH (or height).

Key Terms:

  • Face: A flat surface of a 3D shape.
  • Edge: Where TWO faces meet.
  • Vertex (vertices): Where THREE or more edges meet (corners).

Cube:

  • 6 square faces (ALL equal).
  • 12 edges (all equal length).
  • 8 vertices.
  • 'Think of a DICE or a RUBIK'S CUBE.'

Cuboid:

  • 6 rectangular faces (opposite faces equal).
  • 12 edges.
  • 8 vertices.
  • 'Think of a BRICK or a SHOE BOX.'

Sphere:

  • 1 curved surface (NO flat face).
  • NO edges and NO vertices.
  • 'Think of a BALL or a GLOBE.'

Cylinder:

  • 2 flat circular faces (top and bottom).
  • 1 curved surface.
  • 2 edges (where the flat faces meet the curved surface).
  • NO vertices.
  • 'Think of a TIN CAN or a COLD DRINK CAN.'

Cone:

  • 1 flat circular face (base).
  • 1 curved surface.
  • 1 curved edge.
  • 1 vertex (the tip).
  • 'Think of an ICE CREAM CONE or a PARTY HAT.'

5. Faces, Edges, and Vertices Table

Solid ShapeFacesEdgesVerticesShape of Faces
Cube61286 squares
Cuboid61286 rectangles
Sphere1 (curved)00
Cylinder3 (2 flat + 1 curved)202 circles
Cone2 (1 flat + 1 curved)111 circle
Triangular Prism5962 triangles + 3 rectangles
Square Pyramid5851 square + 4 triangles

6. Nets of 3D Shapes

A NET is a FLAT pattern that can be FOLDED to make a 3D shape.

'If you cut open a cardboard box and lay it flat — THAT is its net!'

ShapeNet Description
Cube6 connected squares in a cross shape
Cuboid6 connected rectangles
Cylinder2 circles + 1 rectangle
Cone1 circle + 1 sector (like a pizza slice)

7. Common Mistakes

  1. Confusing 2D and 3D: 'A square is FLAT (2D). A cube is SOLID (3D). A square has area. A cube has volume.'
  2. Counting faces on a cylinder: 'A cylinder has 3 faces — 2 flat circles and 1 curved surface. Many students forget the curved surface!'
  3. Circle is NOT a polygon: 'A polygon must have STRAIGHT sides. A circle has a curved boundary — so it is NOT a polygon.'
  4. Vertex vs. corner: 'Vertex is a corner where edges meet — in both 2D and 3D shapes. A cube has 8 vertices.'

8. Key Facts to Remember

  • 'Every polygon is a closed shape made of straight line segments.'
  • 'A square is a SPECIAL type of rectangle (with all sides equal).'
  • 'The sum of angles in a triangle is ALWAYS 180°.'
  • 'A sphere has NO edges, NO vertices, and 1 curved face.'
  • 'A cube is a special type of cuboid where all sides are EQUAL.'

9. Self-Test

Q1: Name a 2D shape with: (a) 3 sides (b) 4 equal sides and 4 right angles (c) 5 sides

Q2: Name a 3D shape that has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices. Is it a cube or a cuboid? How can you tell?

Q3: How many faces does a sphere have?

Q4: What is the difference between a line and a ray?

Q5: Draw a net for a cube (describe it in words).

Q6: Which 3D shape has 1 vertex, 1 edge, 1 circular face, and 1 curved surface?

Q7: True or False: A circle is a polygon.

Q8: Name an object around you that is (a) cuboid-shaped (b) cylinder-shaped.

Answers:

A1: (a) Triangle (b) Square (c) Pentagon A2: Both have 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices. If all faces are equal squares → Cube. If faces are rectangles → Cuboid. A3: 1 curved face (no flat faces). A4: A line goes on forever in BOTH directions. A ray goes on forever in ONE direction from an endpoint. A5: A cross shape made of 6 connected squares — 4 in a row and 1 above the second and 1 below the second. A6: Cone. A7: False — a circle has a curved boundary, not straight sides. A8: (a) A book (cuboid) (b) A cold drink can (cylinder)

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo