I am not sure I understand the question in regards to the grass. If the first one is marked ground under repair you are entitled to relief, of one club length. The other one must be played as it lies, if this means the ball is in the bunker, you must not ground the club whether there sand or not.
Yes, if a bunker is marked GUR you are entitled to a free drop. To do so, you remove your ball from the bunker, and from the nearest point of relief you are allowed one club length, you drop your ball and play. If there is water in the bunker and there is no GUR marked you are allowed a free drop in the bunker, no nearer the hole. If you cannot get relief from the water you can either play it or you can take a penalty drop out of the bunker.
This is a mad question. You have to play for learn.
demarcation
demarcation
Earth is Ground, they just have different names.
Two, and possibly a ground. The ground will be clearly marked with a green colored screw.
yes; UPS ground marked ORD-M
When you 'ground' your club you have caused your golf club to come in contact with the ground or another substance such as water, sand or weeds. Generally speaking the subject of grounding a club centres around hazards where you are not permitted to touch the surface or the weeds that exist within an area marked as a hazard. If a player grounds their club in any of these examples they are penalized two strokes for doing so. If a player grounds their club on the putting surface and the ball moves - by gravity, wind or anything else - there is a penalty for this as well.
If this is a standard coil and not a coil pack the negative terminal is one of the two smaller ones on either side when looking at it from the top. The one marked with a minus sign ( - ) is the ground. On most German cars ( usually bosch brand coil ) the side with 1- marked on it is the ground and the one marked with 15+ is the primary positive.
A boundary is marked during the surveying stage. This is a very important step because it lets contractors know how much land they have to work with.
Probably not. We'd need to know what the wire goes to in order to be certain about this.
Not without pictures