yes in 1999 was a match between Alexander ochins and john peperinks it was raining and when Alexander ochins served the ball didn't bounce that's all
Yes, it does. Observe any tennis match or practice, or obtain a ball and just drop it and see what happens.
serve?
it will bounce higher other than any surface.
Hot. Personal experiments have shown that temperatures below 25°C make the ball bounce less. From 25°C and upwards there aren't any greater changes in height of bounce. The balls bounce almost the same.
If someone asks, "Will you serve?" how would you answer? examples: "Like a tennis player" or "Like a waitress" HELP! Any answers!
Only in doubles. Because in doubles you have to serve in the square that is on the other side of the table and on the square on the oposite side of the side you are serving on. In singles you can serve any where or any way you want.
If the serve touches any part of the service box (including the white lines that enclose it), then the serve is in. This includes barely nicking any part of the line.
In singles you can serve to any part of the table. In doubles you can only serve to/from the right court. If the ball touches the line, it is in.
Because the hard surface doesn't absorb any of the energy of the tennis ball - thus the ball bounces higher than if it was dropped on a softer surface.
Historically, when the ball get's wet with any liquid, it will drop and dribble 2 or 3 times and then stay on the ground. The highest it will probably bounce is about half a foot.
Never.
If any part of the ball is touching the line, but the rest is out, it is still called in.