Yes it can as long as it is registered, obviously and it still can reach its top speed, which I belive is 55mph which may have changed, but it shouldn't hinder you from driving it on the highway.
The two types of road are national highways and state highways. National highways go anywhere and are owned and maintained by the government of the country (such as the Interstate in the USA). State highways are roads contained within a single state. The state government is responsible for maintenance of these roads.
They drive on highways and interstates just like they would migrate across any state in the US.
State highways are maintained and managed by state governments, while national highways are maintained and managed by the central government. National highways typically connect major cities and serve as part of the national transportation network, whereas state highways connect cities and towns within a specific state.
Utah and Missouri. Actually, there are 5 Interstate highways in Utah and 17 in Missouri. The only state without any Interstate highways is Alaska.
Highways are paid for by a mix of federal, state, and local funds.
There are several major highways in the state of Virginia. Some of the highways are U.S. Route 19, State Route 28, and State Route 39.
A) freeways, expressways, interstate highways B) freeways, U.S. routes, state highways C) interstate highways, county routes, U.S. routes D) U.S. routes, state routes, expressways
New York have 29 different routs of interstate highways.
Alaska
There are many highways throughout California. Interstate 5 and 80 are the major highways in the state. Both highways run through the capital of Sacramento.
If you want to drive across Alaska, look at a map. The few highways that exist do not span the state. One can drive the southern areas and into the interior, but north of Fairbanks the roads are unimproved and are open seasonal.
thank you