This depends on where you live.
A toll-free road is a road that does not have tolls, meaning that you do not have to pay a fee to drive on that road. Most roads are toll-free.
A toll-free road is a road that does not have tolls, meaning that you do not have to pay a fee to drive on that road. Most roads are toll-free.
you get arrested
To toll a bell (ie to ring it) is a verb and a toll (what you pay to use a road or a bridge) is a noun.
It means that there is a part of the road - if you're travelling on it, that will require you to pay a toll, and part of it that will not. Like on I87, if you're just driving on it through the Bronx, you won't have to pay a toll, but if you're taking it towards upstate, there's a point where you will. That's all it means. On the flip side, there are other roads, like the NJ Turnpike, where no matter where you enter or exit, you will have to pay a toll. Those are not partial toll roads. They are plain ol' toll roads. =))
A toll is something you have to pay. Usually a fee for using a certain road for instance. Toll-free then is an option to do something similar w/o having to pay for it.
The M6 Toll is the largest toll road in the UK.
No. It is not a toll road.
No it wouldn't be a public good, as though the road may be uncrowded, but you still have to pay to be on the road. If you don't have the money to be on the road you would be prevented from going onto the road. Toll roads are excludable goods and therefore are not public goods - the individual is prevented from going onto the road.
Hardy Toll Road was created in 1988.
Turnpike Question found on li08.pacyber.org in 8th grade lesson 8 (:
Toll is the abbrivation of