The answer is no you cant. But you will lose that point.
Wiki User
∙ 2013-05-13 09:16:56You don't "get out" in tennis. You lose or you win.
Losing your serve is when you lose the game in which you were serving, it is said the oppenent (whoever that may be) broke someones (whoever was servings) serve. If you win the game then you held your serve.
It is called double-fault when you miss both of your serves. You lose a point then.
No. A let is a service that touches the net but lands in the correct service box. Whenever a player serves a let, that player is allowed to serve over without penalty. It is essentially an uncounted serve. If a let occurs on the first serve, the player will not lose a point if they then fault; if a let occurs on the second serve (following a fault), it does not produce a double fault and a point for the opponent. It is rare, but possible, to have more than one let on a single service.
You can lose a point for double-faulting on your serve (not getting the ball in the service box after two tries), touching the net (you are not allowed to touch the net), or hitting the ball out.
Sure you can, but you will probably lose. If you were at fault then you were at fault, you cant sue the other guy cause of something you did. Sure you can, but you will probably lose. If you were at fault then you were at fault, you cant sue the other guy cause of something you did.
If you hit the ball into the net in tennis you don't lose a point, rather the opponent get s a point.
After about 3 sets of recreational (amateur) tennis, or 8 games of professional tennis.
when tennis balls get wet they get heavy and the bigger it is the less bounce.
if the score is deuce, the score goes as follows: if you are serving and you win the point, it is ad- in.... if you serve and win again, you win the game. if you are serving and you lose the point, it is ad-out... if you serve and lose again, you lose the game. if it is ad-in, and you lose the point, the score goes back to deuce, until someone wins.
If you open a new can of tennis balls and leave them in the can without using them, it can take a week for the tennis balls to have a significant loss in their bounce. If you are using tennis balls daily, then it can be a matter of a couple of weeks to around three weeks until the tennis balls lose their bounce completely.
Tennis balls bounce because the air pressure inside is higher than the outside pressure. They begin to lose bounce as soon as removed from their pressure can. The alititude where the ball is played will affect the bounce. As they are played, they lose more bounce. Typically, they lose too much bounce to play after about 3 sets of recreational (amateur) tennis, or 8 games of professional tennis.