The boy rode the bike in a chaotic and unpredictable manner, akin to a ball bouncing erratically off walls.
The past tense of "tear off" is "tore off."
The present tense of tore is tear.
It means to rip something from something else, such as: "He tore off the end of the cardboard box." It can also mean to leave in a great hurry, such as: "He tore off to the store before it closed."
Well the only sport that that saying is associated with is baseball and it means to hit the ball so hard that you are going to knock the outer skin right off of it. Obviously that's not possible but it is a good saying none the less.
He tore his arm off.
Because she ran away from the ball.
A batter hits a ball off home plate
they grazed and tore it off of trees
No. A frozen baseball will die off the bat because the reason a baseball reacts to a bat is the connection between the ball and the bat. The bat will not affect the ball in the same way when the ball is frozen.. I recommend trying this because it will damage the bat.
First, if the batter hits the ball with the bat, the ball will mos likely slide off of the saliva and will either cause a foul ball, or an unintentional bunt hit (because the ball won't go very far). It's cheating the game, and baseball regulations require the ball to be dry and free of any non-baseball material at all times.
No, the base is concidered in-play and still a live ball. It is the same thing as the ball bouncing off a fielder or a rock.