If you are playing in a strokeplay competition, unfortunately you keep going until you hole out. If you pick up, you have a non-return, and therefore cannot have a gross score. Keep in mind however, if you are on a par 4 and make a 10, say your handicap does not give you a shot on that hole, the score will count effectively as a 6, depending on how well the rest of your round went you could actually buffer or even get cut.
If you are playing in a stableford competition, you have the option to pick up when you will get no point. But do not pick up, if you still want to return a gross score. You will get no points if you go one over your allowed score for the hole, your allowed score takes your handicap into account, so you need to know which holes you get shots on.
No, it's just however many you take. The people you're golfing with may have a rule to keep the game moving quickly, but there is no official rule.
I guess 3 or less strokes in golf.
In golf, "par" is the expected number of strokes for a hole - or for the entire course (18 holes). This number will vary for each hole, depending on the perceived difficulty of doing it.
Golf is a precision club and ball sport in which competing players (or golfers) use many types of clubs to hit balls into a series of holes on a course using the fewest number of strokes. Golf is defined, in the rules of golf, as "playing a ball with a club from the teeing ground into the hole by a stroke or successive strokes in accordance with the Rules."
For a round of golf, the net score for a player is their gross score minus their handicap. The net score for one hole is the gross for the hole, minus the strokes allowed for the hole. The stroke index for the hole and the players handicap is used to determine how many strokes you get, and on which holes.
Four (4) same as usual one under par
Golf is a game of many rules, the main one of which is that the goal is to reach the final hole with as few swings as possible. This is why the phrase "A hole in one" is so popular, it refers to making it to the hole in just one swing of the golf club.
Work on your short game, pitching and putting. Try to think your way around the golf course and try not to give away too many strokes to penalties.
If you put and your ball hits the flag you get 2 penalty strokes.
Most par 3 golf courses have eighteen holes like a regular golf course, but they will allow you to play only nine holes if you life. However, all of the holes are only a par 3, meaning that the average score on the hole is 3. Thus, the difficulty and length of all the holes overall is typically easier than a regular golf course.
A hole in one
A double eagle (or albatross) is 3 strokes below par. For example, if you get 3 strokes on a par 5, you would have a double eagle.