A tap-in is a putt that is short enough to be missed one-handed.
Duffers who consistently shank their balls are urged to buy and study Shanks - No Thanks by R.K. Hoffman, or in extreme cases, M.S. Howard's excellent Tennis for Beginners.
A ball will always come to rest halfway down a hill, unless there is sand or water at the bottom.
"Play it as it lies" is one of the fundamental dictates of golf
Few golfers are born with the natural talent for hitting the ball, but every player is blessed with the God-given ability to throw a club.
A driving range is the place where golfers go to get all the good shots out of their system.
Fairway: a narrow strip of mown grass that separates two groups of golfers looking for lost balls in the rough.
Garden: One of a vast number of free outdoor restaurants operated by charity-minded amateurs in an effort to provide healthful, balanced meals for insects, birds and animals.
Nonchalant putts count the same as chalant putts.
You do not sew with a fork and I see no reason why you should eat with knitting needles.
Hole in One: an occurence in which a ball is hit directly from the tee into the hole in a single shot by a golfer playing alone.
The true definition of a perennial: Any plant which, had it lived, would have bloomed year after year.
Hoeing: A manual method of severing roots from stems of newly planted flowers and vegetables.
Bulb: potential flower buried in Autumn, never to be seen again.
Wear it if it clashes.
Bets lengthen putts and shorten drives.
Chef: Any cook who swears in French.
I simply cannot imagine why anyone would eat something slimy served in an ashtray.
Advice to anglers: don't take advice from people with missing fingers.
It's often necessary to hit a second shot to really appreciate the first one.
Handicap: an allocation of strokes on one or more holes that permits two golfers of very different ability to do equally poorly on the same course.
Follow through: The part of the swing that takes place after the ball has been hit, but before the club has been thrown.
If the wind is in your face, you swing too hard just to get the ball through it; if the wind is at your back, you swing too hard just to see how far you can get the ball to go.
When your shot has to carry over a water hazard, you can either hit one more club or two more balls.