The first baseman must "have control of the ball". If his hand is on it pinning it to the ground, the call is safe. If he picks it up or in any other way, shows he/she has "control" of the ball, the call is out.
a giraffes does
There are almost 25 field places are there in cricket ground.
The air is very dry in the desert. Because the air is so dry, more of the sunshine reaches the surface. In other places where there is more water vapor in the air, the water vapor filters out more of the sunshine before it reaches the earth's surface.
It usually rains over all kinds of places. Once the rain is on the ground, it quickly goes through several water cycles until it reaches the ocean. Or it simply rains over the ocean.
In the ground
Assuming you mean does there have to be rain where you are for you to hear thunder, the answer is no. Thunder can be heard from quite a distance so the thunder may be happening a distance away where it's raining, and it not be raining where you are.There's also a phenomenon called dry thunder where there is rain from the clouds but it evaporates before it reaches the ground. This is more likely to happen in deserts and other arid places.
There are a number of places. 1. It could run in a stream or river until it reaches the ocean 2. It could evaporate back into the air (as in a puddle) 3. It could be absorbed or consumed by plants or animals 4. It could soak into the ground and become ground water, which could end up in any of the above places. The water cycle is pretty intricate but simple if you remember that water is always moving.
The route of the Interstate 580 in California reaches a variety of places. It begins in San Diego, California and reaches up into the Washington Peninsula.
no, the crushing impact destroys them unless there on top of a really tall sky scraper, then they would faint before they could jump
i think because of the Earth's elliptical orbit, less sunlight reaches these places at the aphelion. =)
There are 3 main places lightening can travel from. The ground to a cloud, a cloud to a cloud, and the cloud to the ground.
the ground and a lake