After taking two steps forward and one step to the right, you should turn left.
Two steps or more without dribbling is called travelling
No, you could take two steps and a hop..and it won't be traveling.
No, two stroke penalty for grounding your club in a hazard prior to taking an actual stroke.
A double minor penalty in hockey is when a player receives two consecutive minor penalties at the same time, resulting in a four-minute penalty. This differs from a regular minor penalty, which is a two-minute penalty for a single infraction.
There is no penalty for the ball landing in the water...only for taking it out without a stroke. Technically, (assuming "the water" means in a water hazard) you could play it out of the hazard (with certain restrictions). It might just barely be in the margin of the water and you might be able to play it out without penalty. Assuming you don't want to do that, THEN you take ONE penalty stroke for taking the ball out of the water. You drop (according to the type of hazard) and then play your next stroke. The usual count is "one in, two out"...you hit one stroke in the water, used one stroke taking it out, and then hit your next stroke (hitting 3).
The penalty is a 5-Yard " Delay of Game " penalty
No, you are not allowed to ground your club in the bunker unless you are taking the actual stroke. If you ground the club in a practice swing or prior to taking the stroke it is a two shot penalty.
This is what traveling means... Traveling is when you take more than 1 step and that is a penalty. Picture yourself with a basketball and you stop dribbling. then take 2 steps. That is travelingMore than two steps without dribbling the ball
The two steps of upwelling is
During a penalty kick in soccer, only the kicker and the goalkeeper are allowed in the penalty box.
A penalty kill is when a team receives a penalty and has to play with a one to two man disadvantage. The penalty kill is over when the oposing team scores or the time received expires.