True or False?

1. You hit your ball into the rough and have a terrible lie. As you ponder your plight, you notice that your follow-through for your next stroke likely would strike a bird’s nest. In this situation you are allowed to take free relief even if the relief would allow you to get a much better lie.
True
False
2. Your ball comes to rest in a bunker, lying on sand that has been pushed up as a result of an animal digging an underground hole. Because your ball is in a bunker, you are not allowed free relief.
True
False
3. You hit your ball into the rough and it comes to rest behind a pile of sticks and branches that the grounds crew has piled up against a tree for later removal. You may not take free relief under the abnormal course condition Rule (Rule 16.1), but you may move the pile of sticks and branches.
True
False
4. Your ball comes to rest in a puddle of water (temporary water) near a cart path and your stance for your next stroke would be on the cart path. You may choose to take relief from either condition. If, after taking relief from one condition, interference by the second condition still exists, you may then take free relief from the second condition.
True
False
5. Your ball comes to rest in a rut made by a maintenance vehicle. You are entitled to free relief because the rut is a hole made by the maintenance staff and therefore is ground under repair.
True
False
6. You hit your tee shot on a par 3 and the ball plugs just short of the putting green, but in a red penalty area. You do not get free relief for a ball embedded in a penalty area.
True
False
7. The course you are playing has adopted Preferred Lies (MLR E-3) and has defined the size of the relief area as one club-length. Your ball comes to rest in the fairway. You determine the one-club length relief area, and part of the relief area is in the rough. You select a spot in the rough within the one-club length relief area where you think your ball will sit up nicely, and you place a ball on that spot. This is permitted even though you have moved the ball from the fairway to the rough.
True
False
8. The course you are playing has adopted Preferred Lies (MLR E-3) and has defined the size of the relief area as one club-length. After your ball comes to rest in the fairway, you correctly take relief under MLR E-3. As you are taking your stance for your next stroke you discover that you have interference from a sprinkler head. You then take free relief from the sprinkler head under Rule 16.1b. correctly dropping your ball in the relief area. You wish to take relief again under MLR E-3 so you can place (not drop) a ball on a chosen spot in the relief area. You may not do so because you did not make a stroke after first taking MLR E-3 relief.
True
False
0
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