I heard the following used on ESPN telecasts in the 1980's with Mike Durbin and Denny Schreiner:
The bucket crumbler - a light hit in which the headpin clips the 2, which falls slowly into the 4. Meanwhile, the headpin rebounds off the sideboard and clips the 8, which falls into the 5. It could also refer to any time a light hit leaves the bucket, which is eventually "crumbled" when the headpin deflects off the sideboard.
A Jersey Squasher - another name for a light-Brooklyn hit
Sour apple - the 5-7-10 split
These are probably just local colloquial uses. I've never heard them in a PBA telecast:
Rattler - when the 4 or 6 pin falls into the gutter on a flush hit and "rattles" back and forth without taking out the corner pin.
Double-clutch - when the 4 or 6 kicks out the corner on the second bounce out of the gutter.
Widow's teeth (or Granny teeth) - Any really odd spread of pins, usually the 2-7-10 or 2-7-9-10 for lefties (3-7-10 or 3-7-8-10 for righties).
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ScolaÃ)O("Get all the fools on your side, and you can be elected to anything." ~Frank Dane
Weighting On 40