I don't believe there's any correct terminology. I think people know what you mean when you say fuzz.
snebol
You could use the hook section of Velcro and tear the fuzz up on one ball and conduct spin and bounce comparisons with a regular ball.
course it does
They have fuzz on them so the air the ball is traveling through can grip the ball to enhance the spin on the ball. ex. To move it farther (backspin) or to make it drop (topspin) or to make it curve to the side (sidespin). The fuzz also allows the ball to have better interaction with the surface, the air and the racquet. As the ball speed increases the fuzz filaments lay down on the ball and the fuzz drag declines. The tennis ball cover is rough but not like sandpaper. Looking closely at the felt you can see that air flows through those raised fabric filaments - better known as fuzz. So the surface of a tennis ball is a "porous surface." It's more like dealing with the wind blowing through leaves on a tree and just as complicated. The fuzz filaments act like tiny cylinders each having their own drag component. In addition to the skin friction drag from the cover itself, drag is created from the airflow over these fuzz fibers interacting with all the other fibers behind it.
kia ora bro
As in, "testicles?" Kintama.
it look like a fuzz ball
doragon bōru Z
The more fuzz, the less bounce. The less fuzzy, the higher the bounce.
The word ball in Japanese is Tama or Dama. The kanji for it is 玉
お握り (onigiri) or 握り飯 (nigirimeshi) can be used to mean "rice ball" in Japanese.