No, the word 'bunted' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to bunt. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.
Examples:
Max bunted the ball and ran to first base. (verb)
The bunted ball rolled about twelve feet. (adjective)
The word 'bunt' is also a noun, a word for a tap of a Baseball with a bat; a type of fungus of cereal plants; the middle part of a sail that pouches to catch the wind.
If the ball stays in fair territory, then everything is like a normal bunt. But if the ball is bunted into foul territory on a third strike, then the batter is automatically out.
Mantle
no because it will be considered a dead ball
yes
It simple has to be in fair territory there is no distance it has to travel.
A "bunt" is a ball batted into the infield by the batter while holding the bat sideways between his hands. This is a deliberately short hit that is designed to advance a runner and not gain first base for the batter. A bunted ball that rolls foul is considered a strike, even if it is the third strike.
the hit still counts as a hit, since it was the other player that knocked it out.
Yea. It usually happens if a player bunts the ball and the ball rolls foul after being bunted.
In most cases the 2nd baseman will be covering 1st base on a bunt play.
He bunted the ball and safely made it to first base.
Yes. At least one that I know of: Cincinnati Reds' Billy Hamilton bunted a triple on Saturday, May 10, 2014. I'm searching for more.
The "a" in "wanted" has a short sound. It is pronounced similar to the "a" in "cat" or "bat."