Yes.
If it then hits the batman outside of off, then the batsman has to have not offered a genuine shot to be out. If he has offered a shot and it hits him outside off, it is not out. But this is not where it pitched. As long as the ball pitches in-line with the stumps or outside off, the batsman can be adjudged LBW
Yes, If in the opinion of the umpire it could hit the stumps if there was no obstacle AND if the batsman makes no attempt to hit the ball.
No. If the ball if the ball hits the bat and then goes onto the pad then the batsman cannot be out LBW. The umpire has to spot this of course.
yes....when the ball pitched in line and the back leg is straight enough to the stumps
Cricket Ball yaar
No.
Even of the ball hits the top of the net, if it goes over, it is still in play.
The ball is still technically in. According to the rules of volleyball, if it hits the net and goes over, it is still in.
its when the ball hits the wiket
Yes, if the ball hits a glove.
when the batsmen hits a bowler/fielder instead of a ball
Ice
You don't get points in cricket, but you do get runs and these are scored when a batsman hits a ball that's bowled at him and the ball goes far away enough to enable him and the batsman the other end to run from one wicket to the other. If they can do that more than once they get a run for each time. But if the ball goes to the boundary they score 4 runs anyway and if the ball goes over the boundary without having touched the ground they score 6.
a sixer is when the batsman hits a shot without touching the boundary.
a let ball is when your ball hits the net and still goes over (like, hits the very tip) on a serve. That is a let. If it doesn't go over it's just considered out. You can reserve, and if it's your first serve, it's still your first serve. Same with second.
In your opponent hits the ball off the table without the ball physically touching the table and you still hit back on the table the point still goes to you