In any play, not just Hamlet, a three-dimensional character is one who appears lifelike, one which has what is called verisimilitude, similarity to life. A two-dimensional character is one which is flat, broadly drawn, stereotypical. A three-dimensional character is not a type he/she appears to be an individual.
Do I like 'Hamlet'? As in the play? In which case, yes, I love it. I think it possibly the greatest story or play written EVER. But if you mean to I like the character of Hamlet then I would have to say that most of the time he doesn't appeal to me - he is a coward.
This expression does not occur in Shakespeare's Hamlet anywhere.
You mean William Shakespeare's Hamlet? It was written around 1600.
I believe that he is speaking about Hamlet Senior and his recent death, that it is fresh.
Why is Hamlet still mourning his father's death after a wedding
It means 2d whereas 3d means three dimensional
Do I like 'Hamlet'? As in the play? In which case, yes, I love it. I think it possibly the greatest story or play written EVER. But if you mean to I like the character of Hamlet then I would have to say that most of the time he doesn't appeal to me - he is a coward.
It is a three-dimensional figure with eleven plane surfaces.
A three dimensional shape is a solid figure or an object which has 3 dimensions which are the length, width and height.
Assuming you mean a pentagon - not penagon, a 3-dimensional pentagon is a dodecahedron which has 12 faces.
Pyramid. Or triangular prism, depending on what exactly you mean.
Objects or shapes that have width, breadth and height are said to be 3 dimensional such as a pyramid, sphere, cylinder, cone, cuboid .... etc
That's like asking "Is a square round or curved ?"You haven't given a choice. "Three dimensional" and "solid"mean exactly the same thing, and a hexagon isn't it.A hexagon is a 2-dimensional, plane figure.
3d stands for '3-dimensional', meaning that the shape has three parametres (or directions) for its space, usually translated as it has length, width, and height.
the hamlet
This expression does not occur in Shakespeare's Hamlet anywhere.
You mean William Shakespeare's Hamlet? It was written around 1600.