Five vehicles or more.
5
Never. The only time you can pass another vehicle on the right is if there is a lane on that side you can go into to pass it.
Trucks/Lorries, or any slow moving vehicle.
"Yield the Right Of Way" means that the vehicle on the intersecting roadway to your right (at a stop sign) has the legal right of way and they should go before you do. On entering a highway (freeway) by an 'on ramp', the vehicle which is already traveling down the road you are merging onto has the "Right Of Way" and you are required to yield to their vehicle when entering traffic. Most drivers will move over and let you in, so not to disrupt the flow of traffic, but they are not required by law to do so. You are required by law to yield them the right of way because you are entering their lane of travel (their Right Of Way) in traffic.
A funeral procession has the right-of-way unless the right-of-way is required by an emergency vehicle giving an audible signal.
you can pass another vehicle waiting to turn right on its left side by going off the road you can stop in it to off load passengers pedestrians, who are already crossing the road when the red man signal starts showing, have right of way
Definition: Commerce, merchandise - exchange, trade, barter Definition: Vehicle - Freighter, van, rig, semi
Radar or LIDAR (laser measurement of speed) has to be directed toward or away from the path of a moving vehicle, as it measures the speed vector between the measuring device and the vehicle. Traffic radar or LIDAR will not measure the speed of a vehicle moving at a right angle to the direction it is pointed.
Right Here Waiting was created on 1999-12-14.
A funeral procession has the right-of-way unless the right-of-way is required by an emergency vehicle giving an audible signal.
yes yes
Almost without exception (actually I can't think of any) if a moving vehicle strikes a stopped vehicle from the rear, the operator of the moving vehicle is held responsible. ** The driver of B. That's why and what they were cited for. A strong hint is in the question - the one who strikes another is almost always wrong.