Generally speaking, no. If your state requires that a vehicle with a valid registration also have insurance you can usually seek a waiver from the state for vehicles that are rarely if ever driven.
Not one of your own-generally you are insured by the owner's policy if you are using someone else's car (with permission)
A new car is not insured unless you insured it. You can insure a car before you pick it up, but if you don't it isn't insured.
Your car is not insured unless you purchase insurance for it.
Only if the insured car was at fault.
Insurance follows the car not the person. As long as she had permission to drive the car, she is covered.
Whether the car is insured is not important, the point is who was at fault in causing the accident, it could be the person whose car is insured that is at fault.
We need to know what he's insured for. If he's insured to drive the car, then yes. If he's insured with life insurance, then no. But normally it's the car that carries the insurance.
They are insured as passengers they are not insured to drive it
If you're liscensed, and have permission from the person under which the car is insured, you are able to drive the car if it is insured even if you yourself are not insured
the car
Is the CAR insured? If not, it's not legal.
Determination is made by the insurance adjustor based on the age make and model of the car , it's Blue Book value, and the condition it was in when you had it insured re: body damage.