A foul can be called if the discus is thrown and goes outside the sector...if you enter the ring from the front, if you leave the ring from the front, if something flys off of you while you are throwing, and if you step on the line (circle) while throwing.
Yes, the word foul is a noun (foul, fouls), a verb(foul, fouls, fouling, fouled), and an adjective (foul, fouler, foulest). Examples:Noun: The referee called a foul.Verb: Take care with the fertilizer, it can foul the pond.Adjective: We don't allow foul language here.
Professional foul
Maybe in some sports you can, but in most sports that is considered a "foul play" or "unnecessary roughness".
The top five common reasons for a foul in hockey are tripping, slashing, high-sticking, hooking, and interference.
Yes, it can
yes because it is a type of foul
Foul is a homograph for foul, it's as simple as that because all homographs are spelled the same, for instance: dove= a delicate bird dove= past tense of dive
A Technical Foul
technical is first
If it looks like the player who fouled did it on purpose then it would be called an intentional foul. otherwise just a foul
Friday! Hooray! Foul Ball! (baseball) Foul ! (any sports event) Farewell! Fabulous! Fight for it! (at sporting event)
Foul :)