"will probably hit the ball out of the park"
Together all those make up the verb phrase. In this case, your verb phrase is also the predicate of the sentence.
"The next batter will probably hit the ball out of the park." verb phrase: "will ( ) hit" modifier: "probably"
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
will probably hit
the next batter to hit
If you are on base, and the batter hits a foul ball that is caught, and there is less than 2 outs, you may attempt to run to the next base after the ball is caught.
If the catcher catches the tip the batter is out. If the catcher does not catch the tip, it counts as a foul ball and the batter continues at bat.
When the third out of an inning is made before the batter has completed a turn at bat, then that player shall be the first batter in the next inning and the ball and strike count shall be cancelled.
To stump someone out in rounders, the fielder must have the ball in their hand and touch the wicket before the batter reaches the crease. The batter typically attempts to run towards the next base after hitting the ball, and if the fielder successfully hits the wicket with the ball while the batter is out of the crease, the batter is out. It's crucial for the fielder to act quickly and accurately to execute this play effectively.
yes, the ball is not dead on a walk, the batter is free to try to advance to second and risk being put out