pully to put the net up
The net should be 3' (36") or 91.5cm at the center strap, and 3'6" (42") or 106.5cm at the post. You can stand your racquet on the ground for reference.
It depends. When serving you can't hit the net. When playing if you hit the net and it goes over, it will be hard to get. If it doesn't go over, well, that's your fault.
Absolutely. One of the sweetest shots, if you can pull it off - around the post. The rules do not specifically say that it has to go over the net, just should not end up in the net.
The standard tennis net is three feet high, exactly one yard.
Soccer tennis is when you have a tennis net and you volley a soccer ball with your feet over the net to the other player. Whoever messes up or hits the net losses a point.
It varies from net to net
They are - the two service courts in tennis are simply the left and right side of the court. See http://daynamanning.ca/archives/2005/11/tennis_court_di.htm for details on court dimensions, post positions, etc.
To play tennis, you need a tennis court, a tennis racket for each player, and a tennis ball. If you are playing singles, one player stands on each side of the net, for doubles, two players are on each side of the net. Players hit the ball with the racket back and forth over the net.
a tennis net
In tennis, the net is stretched across the full width of the court. For single play, this is 27 feet. Doubles requires a 36 foot net.
It is called a "let" in tennis when the ball hits the net because "Filet" is the French word for net and the game originated in France.