Yes, just the same as you can any other driver. You are, however, still bound by the speed limit of that road when overtaking another vehicle.
You can if you have a licensed driver with you, who is over 21.
Not without a learner's permit.
s ugdhhjashlh<JkZJkchzxgdsggsbbx ,jbnxcgbcbbkjbbs zhjhgcbugfgchgjg
Legally, a driver in possession of a learner's permit MUST have a qualified (and sober!) licensed driver in the car whenever the learner is driving. So, no, you cannot act as the more mature driver and take a drunken licensed driver home. Instead, make sure the vehicle is locked and that you have the keys, and call your parent or a friend to come get you and the drunken driver who's supposed to be watching out for you. Don't risk being the driver in this situation, even if "home" is just a few blocks away.
you get a learner's permit at the age of 14 in which you have to drive with someone over the age of 18 for 6 months or 3 months if you take Driver's Ed. At the age of 16, you get your driver's permit.
As many as the car is designed to take.
No, a driver with a learner's permit may only drive when accompanied by a licensed driver over the age of 21.
Your paperwork from your driver's ed course, parental consent (if under 18), your learner's permit, and a vehicle.
A learner's permit is a driver's license with significant restrictions. A person driving with a learner's permit typically must have a licensed adult driver in the front passenger seat.
Several companies offer car insurance for learner drivers including the AA, Aviva and City Insurance. If the learner driver is going to be learning in a car owned by a qualified driver with their own insurance policy it may be possible to add the learner driver to that policy for a nominal fee.
No
In the United Kingdom, the Automobile Association (AA) is one of the biggest companies offering learner driver insurance. They offer short-term learner driver policies (range from 28 days to 24 weeks) as well as annual learner driver policies.