Yes it is.
three and a half
The parts of the basketball court are: the three-point line, the key, the base line, the free throw line, the sideline and the half-court line.
The official types of shots involved in basketball are the mid-range shot, the layup, the three-pointer, the dunk, the alley-oop, the free-throw, and the half-court shot. Those are the official shots, but there are some other slang terms.
a two point shot is anything inside the 3 point line. anything outside the 3 point line is a you guessed it a three pointer ,and if you shoot from behind the half court line its a 4 pointer
20 feet
3 points.
This is because some have the college 3 pointer AND the Pro 3 pointer.
Half court is 32 foot away from the free throw lines ... Here's the math 94 foot court and the free throw line is 15 foot from the base line ( out of bounds) times by two (there are two free throw lines) gives you 64 foot dived by two ( there are two half 's of a court) gives you 32 ...REFER TO LINK POSTED @ BOTTOM OF PAGE ...
There is not a standard distance for the 3 point line because the court size is not mandated, Many times, they play on half of a regulation sized court, so in these cases, the 3 point line would be approximately half the distance as in regulation basketball.
Yes.... one must shoot the ball backwards while hopping on one foot from the half-court line in order to acheive this. There is also a 6 pointer and a 4.5 pointer, but that is too time consuming to explain
Its line segments because it means nothing, it is not used for anything, the top half indicated where the player can take a free throw from, T-Mac used to take his free throws from the top of the circle, instead from the free throw line.
At my school I find the area of a basket ball court by turning left when I walk out of the locker room.