Ball
It is like a ball. One could argue that "like" is part of an adjective. Saying that "like a ball" is discribing "It".
Football (the sport and the ball) is a noun.
"Catch" can be either a noun or a verb. Example as a noun: "That suitcase has a broken catch." Example as a verb, "If an outfielder catches a fly ball in baseball, the batter is out."
The bounce took place before the ball was hit so the ball is a fly ball.
Buzz is a verb an a noun. Verb: The fly buzzed around my head. Noun: What is all the buzz about?
Buzz is a verb an a noun. Verb: The fly buzzed around my head. Noun: What is all the buzz about?
"Fly" is an active verb or a common noun. Example as a verb: Birds fly. Example as a noun: There is a fly in my soup. Example as one of each: A fly moves by flying.
A "Fly out" or "Pop Out" -- generally if it is caught in the outfield it is called a "Fly Out", a ball in the infield is called a "Pop Out"
No it is a fair ball
It is an adverb because it tells when the verb occured.
A fly ball is when the ball is hit high up in the air. A fly ball is almost always caught, so a line drive is the best thing to hit in softball.....Or its a sport where you use flies to push a ball into a goal.