It depends on where the ball is when the catcher catches it. The fact that the ball hit the plate does not matter one bit. It doesn't even matter where the catcher himself is when he catches it. If the ball is in or over fair territory it is fair, if the ball is in or over foul territory it is foul.
Get in the grass or gravel and floor it. If the front tire spins it's front wheel drive. If the rear tire spins it's rear wheel drive. If neither front or rear spins, take it out of park!!
crank the motor over and watch which way the fan spins. If your standing in front of the motor and and spins clockwise (to the right) its standard. If it spins counter clockwise(to the left) its reverse.
There is no problem. This is exactly how the FWD system works. Both front wheels do not pull at the same time.
a Spiech. It is a piece of glass that spins to keep moisture and water from building up on it.
A cutting torch in the hands of an experienced mechanic could do it.
If the ball landed behind home plate, it is already a foul ball, even if it rolls back into fair territory. If the batter already has 2 strikes and then the ball is bunted foul, it's an out. The above answer is wrong. If a batted ball lands behind home plate but rolls forward and settles on the plate or in front of the plate, it is a fair ball.
there is a little rubber knob thing that spins its under the hood behind the light ,turn in pushes the lights down.
The propeller of an airplane typically spins in a clockwise direction when viewed from the cockpit. This is known as a "right-hand" rotation.
well there is a crank shaft which the piston connects to and is the thing that spins out the engine, there is also cranks on old cars to start them on the front
2 and 1/2 spins in a 900
how does the planet mercury's spins?
The plural of "spin" is "spins."