This is correct.
Clarification: You may never "DRIVE" to the left of a yellow line. However, you may CROSS the yellow line at a right angle to make an immediate legal left turn.
A flashing yellow light means you should drive with caution when approaching and moving through the intersection.
Controlled intersections have traffic lights, yield signs or stop signs to control traffic. At a controlled intersection where you face a green light, drive carefully through the intersection at a steady speed. If the light has been green for a while, be prepared to stop when it turns yellow. However, if you are already so close that you cannot stop safely, drive through the intersection with caution. Where you face a red light, come to a complete stop and wait until the light turns green. When you approach an intersection on a main road, and the intersection is blocked with traffic, stop before entering the intersection and wait until the traffic ahead moves on. This does not apply if you are turning left or right. At a controlled intersection where you face a yield sign, slow down or stop if necessary and wait until the way is clear before driving through the intersection. At a controlled intersection where you face a stop sign, come to a complete stop. Drive through the intersection only when the way is clear (Diagram 2-15).
Unless that particular stretch of road is guarded with a "NO LEFT TURN" sign or is blocked with a median, then it is legal to turn left across yellow lines (such as you would to turn into a parking lot), provided you drive with due caution as you would with any other left turn.
If you have a double-yellow stripe in the center of the road, then you are not allowed to pass. Same rule applies to a single yellow stripe, or when a solid line is on your side and a dotted line on the other.
Yours.
driveway
form_title= Driveway Paving form_header= Keep your drive smooth. What is the size of your driveway?*= _ [50] Do you want a concrete driveway?*= () Yes () No When do you need the project completed?*= _ [50]
Traffic laws vary of course. In places where there is a solid yellow light, indicating that it will soon be red meaning stop, generally you can enter the intersection while it is yellow. The core idea is, "stop if safe to do so." If you could have stopped, but instead accelerate to make it through while still yellow, one might argue that you violated the idea, and in some areas this is against the law. Also, in some areas (such as Oregon) where you should stop at yellow unless it's unsafe, you are expected to drive through the intersection "cautiously."
You may not cross a double yellow line or drive to the left side of the roadway when approaching within 100 feet of an intersection or a railroad crossing.
You may not cross a double yellow line or drive to the left side of the roadway when approaching within 100 feet of an intersection or a railroad crossing.
We drive on a parkway and park on a driveway because a parkway is defined a "a broad landscaped thoroughfare" and a driveway is defined as "a private road giving access from a public way to a building on abutting grounds."
i have no clue!