Yes, but officials usually focus on a 5 second inbound violation rather than a three second violation.
Yes, the time is reset for each throw.
The 3 second call in the lane does not start until the offense has brought the ball into the front court. There is no three-second count during rebounding action or during an out-of-bounds throw-in, until the ball is inbounds. The count on a player in the restricted area is suspended when that player begins to try for a goal (shot).
After the second shot when it bounces off the rim.
The 3 second call in the lane does not start until the offense has brought the ball into the front court. At this point if a player spends 3 or more consecutive seconds in the lane, they are violating the 3 second rule. There is no three-second count during rebounding action or during an out-of-bounds throw-in. The count on a player in the restricted area is suspended when that player begins to try for a goal (shot).
You throw to second and get the double play, generally. If theres 2 outs you throw to first
Three things affect the trajectory of a curve ball: Coriolis effect, gravity and precession AKA spin drift.
On 5th January, the Spanish throw candies and other sweets onto floats during the Three Kings Day parade, which celebrates the arrival of the Three Wise Men. This tradition is similar to how children celebrate Mardi Gras by catching beads and sweets thrown from floats during parades.
The non-offensive team may call a timeout during any dead-ball situation. So for instance after the first free throw (of two) or first/second free throw (of three) is shot, the non-shooting team could call timeout -- at least in the NBA. Not positive of the rule at other levels. Dallas in the 2006 Finals against Miami famously (and erroneously) called their final timeout after the first of two Dwyane Wade free throws, meaning they couldn't advance the ball to halfcourt after he took his second, if you want an example.
clever
There are three phonemes in the word "throw": /θ/ /r/ /oʊ/.
it will throw me far