DIVOT
Most shots from the fairway with an iron will scrape off the top of the turf where the ball was resting. "Divot" refers to both the turf that is scraped up, and the scarred area in the fairway where the turf had been.
This term is easily confused with "ball mark." A ball mark refers to the hole or mark that is left on the green after a well struck ball lands there. The divot is the damage done to the course on an iron shot off of the green.
DRAW
A flight path of the ball in which the ball curves gently right-to-left for a right-handed player, or left-to-right for a left-handed player. At impact, the ball starts out slight to the right of the target (for a right-handed golfer), before gently curving back to the left arrive at its target.
Commonly confused with terms hook and pull. Hook is essentially a draw that travel too severely to the left. This shot is not wanted and never played intentionally. A pull is a shot that ends up left of the intended target but on a straight trajectory.