The term you're looking for is "sideout." In volleyball, a sideout occurs when the serving team wins the rally and is the only team to score a point. This term is used in the context of traditional scoring systems, where only the serving team can score.
The server receives an "ace" and the point is awarded to the serving team.
whoever wins the serve gets a point
One point.
If the ball hits the line, for example on a serve, it is still considered in and the serving team will get that point. This also applies to the case where if someone blocks a hit and the ball lands on the line of the court the blocker scores that point
Add out is a term that was used before in scoring meaning that the receiving team had to win the rally to get serve, then they could start scoring points. While the opposing team is serving, the receiving team is in add out. This method of scoring isn't used anymore in rec leagues, high school, or college volleyball. It changed simply because the games were taking entirely too long.
In volleyball, game point is the point that a team needs to win in order to win the game. It is significant because it determines the outcome of the match. If a team scores the game point, they win the game. If the opposing team scores the game point, the game continues until one team wins by two points. This makes game point a crucial moment in a match, as it can decide the winner.
The serving team automaticlly gets one point
When a team lose they serving privileges it is called a SIDE-OUT.
When your team scores a point and the previous serve was the other teams ball, you rotate clockwise and the person who was in front of the server before, will be the server.
A Service Change in Volleyball in pretty self-explanatory. When the serving team loses a point this is called a "Service change" which means that the opposition becomes the serving team and serves the next point. You could break it down to a less technical term 1. Serve Change 2. Change Serve This term is also used in Tennis.
Volleyball has one ball and 3-6 players on one court. The ball is served every time the winning team scores a point. It stays the same server until the serving team does not score a point. All of the players on the court must rotate positions every point. The ball is out of bounds if it goes behind the side lines and the outline. If the ball is on the line it counts as a point for the team that hit it there.
While serving, if the player's foot breaks the line, it is considered a foot fault, and the opposing team is awarded a point.