There are so many ways to describe rotation on the cue ball.Colin Colenso said:Please tell me if you think the term side english is required sometimes or should we just use the term english when refering to side spin on the CB?
I have heard the term stop english used. Are there any other uses of the term english, such as draw english or follow english?
All opinions appreciated, unless of course that opinion happens to be that I am an idiot.:grin:
Remember I grew up in a snooker world where we use side on the white pill and proper english when we speak.
Here are some terms describing contact with the cue ball (there are others, but these are fairly common):
Left
Left english
Lef spin
Left side
Lef hand side
Right
Right english
Right spin
Right side
Right hand side
Top / Top spin / Top English
High ball
Forward Spin
Follow
Force Follow
Draw
Bottom / Bottom Spin / Bottom English
Rewind
Back Spin
Low ball
Screw
Here are some spin terms, relative to the object ball or rail:
Inside
Outside
Running
Hold up
Reverse
Slow Down
Back up
Check / Check Side
Top stop
And don't forget combos:
Top left
High right
Bottom right
Low left
etc.
The point is, most pool players will understand what you mean. There is no point in trying to adopt a universal set of definitions for these terms. It's part of the color of pool. Besides, there is no pool grammar police department I know of

-td
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