Bogey.
A double bogey is two strokes over par for a given hole. So a 5 on a par 3, 6 on a par 4 and 7 on a par 5.
It's called an Albatross or also double eagle From Wikipedia
Depending on the golf course, the set par can be anything, but it is very common for the par to be 3 and 4
A condor is 4 under par on a given hole, so a double condor would most likely be 5 under par on a given hole. The only way this could be achieved is a hole in one on a par 6, which would only require a 700 yard or so drive.
It would have to be on a par 5, although, there is a par 6 in the world.
double eagle, that's correct for the USA but here in the UK 3 under is classed as an AlbatrossScoring terms summarised+1 = Bogey (then this goes up - ie. double bogey, triple bogey etc etc)+/-0 = Par-1 = Birdie-2 = Eagle-3 = Albatross (Double Eagle)-4 = Condor-5 = Ostrich (almost impossible as this would require a hole-in-one on a par 6 which on their own are very rare)
There is really no reason for this but mostly it is because the designers don't it that way.
Each hole is assigned a par, which is the amount of shots that it should take to complete the hole.You can have a 3 different pars, 3,4 and 5 on the very rare occasion there may be a par 6. This in not likely on championship courses.An Albatross ocucurs when a golfer takes 3 shots less than the par.So in effect a par 3 cannot have an albatross scored on it as that would be a score of zero which isn't possible.On a par 4 the player would only take one shot for the ball to end up in the hole.On a par 5 the player takes only two shots to complete the hole.Needless to say an Albatross is a rare score!
1 - UCC activates the PAR teams. 2 - PAR teams perform pre-attack actions. 3 - PAR Teams perform initial surveys. 4 - PAR teams report to the UCC. 5 - PAR Teams mark hazards and contaminated areas. 6 - UCC consolidates information and reports to the EOC.
You are probably refering to a "bogey" and an "eagle". Each hole on a golf course has a specific number of shots it should take a player to get his/her golfball from tee to hole(cup). This number is refered to as "par". There are par 3,4, and 5 holes on a golf course. On an eighteen hole course, these holes combine for a total of par 70-72 depending on how many par 3,4, and 5 holes the course contains. If a person takes 3 strokes on a par 4, this would be a "birdie" ( 1 under par on that hole). The scoring for a par 4 hole is like this: 2 over (6)= double bogey 1 over (5)= bogey even (4)= par 1 under (3)= birdie 2 under (2)= eagle Hope this is what you are looking for.
It is: 2--6-4 = 4 because a double minus becomes a plus and so --6 = +6
It is: 2--6-4 = 4 because a double minus becomes a plus and so --6 = +6