Yes. Depending on the force in which a marble hits the pin.
It typically takes about 110-130 Newtons of force to knock over a standard 15-inch-tall bowling pin. This force can vary depending on factors such as the weight of the bowling ball and the angle at which it strikes the pin.
Knock it down.
it tries to knock all the pins down
One is required to knock down all pins at once in a game of bowling in order to get a strike. If playing five pin, then 5 pins would need to be knocked down. Ten pins would be required in a game of 10 pin bowling.
I think you may be referring to cherry-picking.In bowling it is when you have two pins close together, with one in front of the other, and you take the first one out by deflecting in front of the back pin and missing it.To knock over a pin in bowling that has previously been missed. (see link below)
Obviously the ten pin bowling
If a pin stands back up or is moved out of place, then it is not a strike. The pin must be bowled where it is standing. If the pin is out of range for the rack to pick it up and the sweep knocks it over, the pin is placed back in its original position. If the pin is out of place for the rack to pick up and the sweep does not knock it over, the pin must be shot at where it stands.
The height of a bowling pin is 15 inches.
You cannot. It is 10-pin bowling.
One of the objects* at the far end of the bowling lane, which one tries to knock down by using a bowling ball. *Usually ten, arranged in a triangle; though versions with five or nine pins exist as well.
Knocking down all the remaining pins after the second ball in tenpin bowling is termed as a spare.
1 point a bowling pin