Of course.
A Japanese professional bowling lane is typically 39.5 meters long, which is approximately 129 feet. This length includes the approach area and the lane itself, which is designed to meet international standards for competitive play. The lane width is generally 1.06 meters (about 41.5 inches). Overall, the specifications are similar to those used in other countries for professional bowling.
Because the ball is rolled down a specific lane or alley towards the pins.
Yes
Text can be used with a diamond symbol to delineate
[answer removed for not follow terms of use]My answer:The "gutter" in bowling, is a term used to describe the two channels, one on either side of the bowling lane. If the bowl reaches the channel, a zero or "miss" is recorded for that shot. Even if the ball comes back out of the gutter at some point, it is still scored as a zero and the pins are reset.
yes but no if players are chasing low scores they go easy on the bowling
The front of the lane is maple and the middle to end of the lane is pine, that's why you see two different colors. Today most lanes are not made of wood, they are made of a synthetic material.
It was lost to friction between the bowling ball, the lane, and the air through whichthe ball was forced to plow on its way to the far end of the gutter. Some of it wenttoward kinetic energy of air that was pushed out of the way, and the rest of it causedsome of the floor boards in the lane to become slightly warmer.
Both are correct.It's a matter of context, however both could be used interchangeably.For example:"How many players are on a bowling team?""My friend Aaron and I were on the same bowling team.""At my previous high school I bowled on a team that won the league.""I bowled on a team that won all the league awards."To help stress you may not be the only one, examples could be:"In bowling class, we bowled in teams of three.""There were five people bowling in each team.""Do you prefer bowling in a team of four or five?"
used bowling balls
It would depend on the lane condition, the style of deliver from the bowler, ball speed, surface adjustments to the ball and the drilling pattern used.
Assuming you're referring to woodwinds, not organ patches... You have single reeds and double reeds. Singles are used by saxaphone players and Clarinet players. Double reeds are used by Oboe players and bassoon players. Sources: I'm with the band.