Check local rules, but you will usually have to play the ball as it lies, obviously if there is a tee marker in the way you can move it, or take a drop if it is immovable, but the drop will be one club length from the nearest point of relief.
Yes
That would depend on whether the ball winds up landing in the service box or not. If the served ball hits the net and lands outside the service box, a fault is called. If the served ball hits the net and lands within the service box, a let is called.
No
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They could play box ball and etc.....
yes
If you just hit a ball out of bounce from the tee box or if you don't know if you did you can call for a provisional ball. You would hit your second shot from the tee box "your provisional shot" and see if you can find the first ball. If you can't and your provisional ball is in play then you have play provisional ball and you accrue a 1 shot penalty stroke also. If you find your first shot off of the tee then you pick up your provisional ball and play your first tee shot. No penalty if you find your first tee shot and you can play it. So, the second shot from the tee box would be considered a provisional shot.
it's all depending on the size of the two balls. if you still have the box, there's your answer!
No. The ball you start a hole with is the ball you must finish the hole with. You can change to a different ball only prior to the T box.
A team.
If the ball hits the net on a serve and it still goes over and lands on the other side of the service box then it is called a "let". If the ball its the net and does not go over, or into the service box then it called a "vault". The worst thing a player can do is double vault, which means they missed the service box twice in a row.
The indentations on golf balls are called dimples. Most golf balls have more than 300 dimples. The number, shape, size and depth of the dimples affect.the flight of the ball. The number of dimples is generally printed on the box
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