With a proper hook, the ball only contacts the 1, 3, 5 and 9 pins (sequentially tinted red) to achieve a strike. All the other pins are knocked down in a chain reaction called pin scatter. This is commonly known as a perfect strike.
Front view:[1] ball impacts center pocket at "board 17.5"—found by a USBC pin-carry study[2] to maximize strike probability. The ideal impact point is closer to the center of the head pin than most people think.[1]
In bowling, a strike means that all of the pins have been knocked down on the first ball roll of a frame. On a bowling scoresheet, a strike is marked by an "X".[3]
In American nine-pin bowling, a ringer is an equivalent term for knocking down all pins on the first ball of the frame (known as a full house).
^ abFreeman & Hatfield 2018, Chapter 10 ("The Pocket Isn't the Pocket... and It's Nowhere Near Where You Think It Is").