Suriname and Guyana are the only two countries on mainland South America with driving on the left. Guyana inherited the practice as a British colony. The Netherlands converted to driving on the right at the end of the 18th century. But the former Dutch colony of Suriname has kept the practice of driving on the left.
Click the link for an very good explanation of why this is the case.
Eastern, Middle Eastern, and South American countries were the first places to use hand and finger puppets. They were used to reinforce messages about the consequences of evil deeds.
In South Africa, they drive on the left-hand side of the road.
South America has the fewest amount of countries at just 13. On the other hand, Africa has the most at nearly 50.
Nigeria changed to left hand driving on April 2, 1972.
They didn't. Right hand vehicles are still the norm in most non-North American countries.
All of them are composed of three ethnic groups: Native Americans or Amerindians; people of European descent and people of African ancestry. Most countries within Latin America (Central America included) have these three ethnic groups and mixtures of all three of them. For example, mestizo people, a mix of native American and European, makes up the majority of most countries in Central America. On the other hand, South American countries have kept a more pronounced segregation; this has resulted in countries with an overwhelmingly majority of European (Argentina: 97%; Uruguay: 88%) or Amerindian (Peru: 45%) people.
(ex. South America, Africa, North America, Europe, Antartica, Asia, Australia)
right
the American Indians
Yes, it is legal to use hand signals when driving. In fact if your turn signal goes out you should use hand signals.
The statement 'Using a hand held communication device while driving can be more dangerous than drunk driving' is TRUE.