You can get as many tries as you want as long as you don't attempt to hit the ball. If you attempt to hit the ball then you get two tries (faults) before the other player wins the point.
3
2.
The other team was the opponent. In the tennis match, Ruby was Daisy's opponent. My opponent was scary. The opponent was prepared.
It doesn't matter. Just depends on who gets there faster.
The best strategy in tennis is to hit the ball where the opponent isn't. You will also win if you keep your opponent running around back and forth, which will tire them out.
If by what you mean is are you allowed to hit the return before it bounces - NO.
it means you or the opponent made an easy out and they say for example,you get an out an the opponent gets 1 love.
You lose the point and your opponent wins the point.
That is called an ace.
a rally
it doesn't matter where your tennis racket is just as long as it hits the tennis ball
Yes and no. You cannot usually hit a tennis ball that is not on your side, but if the ball bounces on your side first and, when it bounces, spins back to the opponent's side of the court, you may hit it before it bounces again.
By scoring more points, more quickly than your opponent.
it would be classed as out