In Bowling the term used when knock down all the pins is "Strike".
Where the pins are placed is called "the deck". The area where they fall back into is called "the pit".
We call it a "gutterball", not sure if that is the correct term for it...
a strike ( if you knock all the bowling pins down with one " throw " of the bowling ball )
it tries to knock all the pins down
They either land on the pin deck, drop in the pit, or fall in the gutter. The pinsetter then picks up an pins left and the sweep dumps all the pins into the pit to be resorted into pinsetter for the next frame.
To knock all the pins down.
If you get strikes in all of the frames in a game, it is called a perfect 300 score
Because the pins are shorter, squatter, and lighter than that of the tenpin. The bowling ball is also a lot smaller and there are no finger holes (similar to that of candlestick bowling). Scoring is more difficult because there is less control.The pins are arranged the same way as tenpin bowling. However you have 3 shots per frame to knock down all the pins. A strike is made when all the pins are knocked down on the first roll. A spare is made when all the pins are knocked down in two rolls. If it takes all three shots to knock down the pins, then you get a score of ten but no bonus.Scoring works the same as in tenpin bowling and a perfect game is still 300. As of 2008 a perfect score has still not been recorded.
Bowling, Strike means all pins down on first ball . Spare means all remaining pins down on second ball. If you gett a gutter ball on the first try, and all pins down on the second ball , it's still a spare.Pins left standing on second ball is an open frame.
If you can knock all the pins down with one ball, that is a strike.
Knocking down all the remaining pins after the second ball in tenpin bowling is termed as a spare.