putt
A change in speed or direction of a golf ball causes a net force to act on it. According to Newton's second law of motion, this net force results in an acceleration of the golf ball in the direction of the applied force. This acceleration causes the golf ball to speed up or change its direction.
Serving, or service.
When a ball hits a wall, the force of the ball hitting the wall (impact force) pushes against the wall, while the wall exerts an equal and opposite force back on the ball (reaction force).
The equal action and reaction forces do not cancel each other out when one person hits a ball because they act on different objects. The force exerted by the person hitting the ball causes the ball to accelerate in the direction of the force, while the reaction force from the ball pushes back on the person, causing them to feel the impact of hitting the ball.
The act of the bat hitting the ball illustrates Newton's Third Law of Motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. When the bat applies a force to the ball, the ball also exerts an equal force back on the bat, causing it to bounce off in the opposite direction.
To play mini golf just go to a putting green and put small or large objects as obsticles (optional but it's more fun this way). Since in a putting green there are many flags, go from one flag to another constantly with those obsticles, (that's if you want to put them). So yes, mini golf is putting only from hole to hole with obstacles like, sand (sprinkle some in one place and it will be like an obstacle, the ball will slow down if it goes over it), rocks, leaves with a stem so it will act like a tree (puncture the ground with the stem). That's how you play mini golf, you have to have a putting green with obstacles and put to each hole and count how many shots it takes for you to go in the hole. (Sorry, i might have confused you but 95% of mini golf has obstacles so I mean you can put them like it's suppose to be or not).
The indentations on golf balls are called dimples. These dimples act as turbulators, which increase the speed, and therefore the distance, which the ball travels, by reducing drag. People began to notice this when they began to realise that poorer people, who had nicks and bumps in their golf balls simply because they couldn't afford new ones, were better at golf than the rich people with brand new smooth balls, prompting aerodynamicists to try and find out why. Now all golf balls have these indentations, or 'dimples'.
hitting: noun: the act of contacting one thing with another; "repeated hitting raised a large bruise";
In tennis, serving is the act of starting a point by hitting the ball into the opponent's court. The key rules and techniques involved in serving include standing behind the baseline, hitting the ball into the diagonally opposite service box, ensuring the ball lands within the service box, and following the proper service motion to generate power and accuracy. Players must also alternate serving from the deuce and ad courts and are allowed two attempts to serve the ball into play.
On February 6, 1971, during the second of two EVA's (moonwalks) on the Apollo 14 lunar mission, Alan Shepard used an improvised 6-iron to hit two golf balls that he had hidden in his spacesuit. Shepard and astronaut Edgar Mitchell spent 9.5 hours collecting samples on the Moon, and Mitchell got into the act by tossing a lunar scoop handle like a javelin.
To facepalm is the act of hitting your face or forehead with your hand.
you cant make a master ball with an ultra ball