crease tile - significado y definición. Qué es crease tile
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Qué (quién) es crease tile - definición

AREA DEMARCATED BY WHITE LINES PAINTED OR CHALKED ON THE FIELD OF PLAY
Popping crease; Return crease; Bowling crease; Batting crease; Popping Crease; Bowling Crease

Roof tiles         
  • Ancient Greek roof tiles
  • Tilehanging in [[Weybridge]], [[Surrey]]
  • Coloured roof tiles on [[St. Mark's Church, Zagreb]]
  • Roman roof tile fragment (78 mm wide by 97 mm high) found in [[York]], England, with the impression of a kitten's paw
  • Spanish Colonial style ceramic tile roof in Texas, US
  • Roof fragment of Roman bath in [[Bath, Somerset]], [[England]]
  • A roof in [[Hainan]] tiled using imbrices and tegulae
  • A tomb mural of [[Xinzhou]], [[China]] dated to the [[Northern Qi]] (550–577 AD) period, showing a hall with a tiled roof, [[dougong]] brackets, and doors with giant [[door knockers]] (perhaps made of bronze)
TILE DESIGNED MAINLY TO KEEP OUT RAIN
Roof tile; Biberschwanz; Peg tile; Tilehanging; Tile-hanging; Roofing tiles
Roof tiles are designed mainly to keep out rain, and are traditionally made from locally available materials such as terracotta or slate. Modern materials such as concrete, metal and plastic are also used and some clay tiles have a waterproof glaze.
return crease         
  • The popping crease is visible here, with England's [[Marcus Trescothick]] playing a shot that has involved him moving forward over his own crease to intercept the ball. In taking a successful run, he must ground his bat behind the corresponding crease at the other end of the pitch, and his batting partner must in turn ground himself behind Trescothick's crease. Should Trescothick have ventured beyond his crease in playing his shot, he risked being stumped.
  • [[Jim Allenby]] bowling; he must ground some part of his foot behind his popping crease and within the return creases for the ball to be a legal delivery. As a member of the fielding side, he can also – after delivering the ball – attempt to run out a batsman by breaking the stumps with the ball before the batsman manages to return to the popping crease.
  • Here the batsman has played a shot and missed, with the wicketkeeper receiving the ball. The 'keeper, believing that in playing his shot the batsman has ventured beyond his popping crease, has broken the stumps with the ball in an attempt to dismiss him 'stumped'. He is appealing to the umpire to review and either accept or refuse the dismissal. It now falls to the umpire to adjudge whether the batsman had indeed ventured beyond his crease, a decision that in modern cricket is assisted by technology and replays.
¦ noun Cricket each of two lines on either side of the wicket between which the bowler must deliver the ball.
Tile-based game         
  • A game of dominoes
GAME BASED ON TILES THAT CAN BE ARRANGED
Games/Tile based; Tile based games; Tile-based games; Tile-based board game; Tile-based board games; Tile-based physical games; Tile-based physical game; Tile game; Tile (gaming); Tilebased game; Tile based game; Game tile; Tile board game; Tile-laying board game
A tile-based game is a game that uses tiles as one of the fundamental elements of play. Traditional tile-based games use small tiles as playing pieces for gambling or entertainment games.

Wikipedia

Crease (cricket)

In the sport of cricket, the crease is a certain area demarcated by white lines painted or chalked on the field of play, and pursuant to the rules of cricket they help determine legal play in different ways for the fielding and batting side. They define the area within which the batsmen and bowlers operate. The term crease may refer to any of the lines themselves, particularly the popping crease, or to the region that they demark. Law 7 of the Laws of Cricket governs the size and position of the crease markings, and defines the actual line as the back edge of the width of the marked line on the soil, i.e., the edge nearest to the wicket at that end.

Four creases (one popping crease, one bowling crease, and two return creases) are drawn at each end of the pitch, around the two sets of stumps. The bowling creases lie 22 yards (66 feet or 20.12 m) apart, and mark the ends of the pitch. For the fielding side, the crease defines whether there is a no-ball because the wicket-keeper has moved in front of the wicket before he is permitted to do so. In addition, historically part of the bowler's back foot in the delivery stride was required to fall behind the bowling crease to avoid a delivery being a no-ball. This rule was replaced by a requirement that the bowler's front foot in the delivery stride must land with some part of it behind the popping crease (see below).