True or False?

1. Your tee shot down the middle goes too far and finishes in a red penalty area (a creek) that crosses the fairway on the straightaway hole. There is five yards of rough between the end of the fairway and the creek. When taking penalty relief, your only option is to drop within two club-lengths of where the ball last crossed the edge of the red penalty area.
True
False
2. Your approach has found the green of a hole that has a pond marked as a yellow penalty area in front of the green. Your slick putt from above the hole is struck too firmly, and the ball races past the hole, off the green, and into the yellow penalty area. You may replay your putt, with one penalty stroke.
True
False
3. You hit your tee shot into a red penalty area (a creek) to the right of the fairway. You elect to use the two club-length lateral relief option. The ground where you will drop slopes down toward the penalty area, and grass is shorter/better close to the red line. In the hope of getting the best possible lie for your next shot, you decide to drop just a few inches outside the penalty area (where the grass is the shortest), with the expectation that the dropped ball will either land and stay in the short grass or that it will roll into the penalty area after two drops, in which case you would place the ball where it landed on the second drop. Such a procedure is permissible.
True
False
4. You hit your tee shot into a large, dense area of bushes. You find your ball in a marginally playable position and play it, moving the ball only two feet and into the center of a bush, where it is now truly unplayable. You may return to the teeing area with a two-stroke penalty.
True
False
5. On a windy day, you play your approach shot onto an exposed, elevated putting green. Concerned that the wind might move the ball, you rush to the green and mark and lift your ball. When it is your turn to play, you replace the ball. A few seconds after you replace the ball, the wind blows the ball off the putting green. You must replace the ball on its original spot on the putting green, without penalty.
True
False
6. Your ball finishes in a paper cup in the rough. The correct procedure is to lift the ball, remove the cup, and drop a ball as near as possible to the spot directly under where the ball lay in the cup.
True
False
0
{"name":"True or False?", "url":"https://www.quiz-maker.com/Q93V3QRPJ","txt":"1. Your tee shot down the middle goes too far and finishes in a red penalty area (a creek) that crosses the fairway on the straightaway hole. There is five yards of rough between the end of the fairway and the creek. When taking penalty relief, your only option is to drop within two club-lengths of where the ball last crossed the edge of the red penalty area., 2. Your approach has found the green of a hole that has a pond marked as a yellow penalty area in front of the green. Your slick putt from above the hole is struck too firmly, and the ball races past the hole, off the green, and into the yellow penalty area. You may replay your putt, with one penalty stroke., 3. You hit your tee shot into a red penalty area (a creek) to the right of the fairway. You elect to use the two club-length lateral relief option. The ground where you will drop slopes down toward the penalty area, and grass is shorter\/better close to the red line. In the hope of getting the best possible lie for your next shot, you decide to drop just a few inches outside the penalty area (where the grass is the shortest), with the expectation that the dropped ball will either land and stay in the short grass or that it will roll into the penalty area after two drops, in which case you would place the ball where it landed on the second drop. Such a procedure is permissible.","img":"https://www.quiz-maker.com/3012/images/ogquiz.png"}