If they hit or touch the rope, you give it to the person who didn't hit it. They serve it and you continue playing.
The person who is riding the bike dies...if you hit him/her hard enough.
It is sent to the desired person
Typically the person who hit you pays. If they don't have insurance, your no fault insurance will pay for it.
It depends on the speed of the semi, and the angle of which the person is hit. For example, if a person is hit dead-on by a semi at about 55 miles per hour, then it is certain death. If it is dead-on, but at 25 miles per hour, then there is a chance of the person living.
The object of tetherball is to hit the ball and the attached string around a pole for a certain amount of rotations until it can no longer be hit anymore, whoever does that wins.
The planets are pulled around by the suns center of gravity, wort of like what happens when you swing a ball around on a rope, it does not ever hit you because you are in the center.
the person who throws is out
You can get a ball and hit it against a wall with a bat or stump so it comes back and hit again..or you can put a ball in a sock and tie it to a rope and tie the rope to a roof so it swings and hit that
They could get knocked out and go blank for a couple hours.
and gets cited for driving with a suspended license.
It depends on the rules as rules vary from place to place. Normally, if the catcher is on the team of the person who's hit, then the hitter is out, if the catcher is on the hitter's team, the person who is hit is out.
The person who hit the car, if "at fault" would be responsible. If the person driving your car was the one at fault, then it would be your insurance that would have to cover it.