its not
A wrap around driveway wraps around the house, leading to the garage behind the house (usually the garage would not be visible from the road).
depends on the city/state you live in. Wilmington, DE requires boats to be parked on a paved surface but not past the front edge of your house. I.E. on a side driveway or in a garage.
Yeah its not really your car, they can take it just about anywhere a tow truck can tow it, like not in a garage or if the car is blocked in by other cars
The noun 'driveway' is a singular, common, compound, concrete noun; a word for private road that connects a house, garage, or other building with the street; a word for a thing.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example functions for the noun 'driveway':The driveway was littered with branches from the storm. (subject of the sentence)The trees obscured where the driveway led. (subject of the adverbial clause)We're finally paving the driveway. (direct objectof the verb 'paving')Whose car is parked in the driveway? (object of the preposition 'in')
It depends on how far the house is from the pavement as to how long is a driveway!
I guess
If it's a public driveway then the property owner can charge. If it's a private driveway to a house then no you can't and shouldn't charge to park.
If the guest is expected and there are no parking restrictions in place it is appropriate for the guest's vehicle to be parked either in the driveway, or in a designated parking place in the street in front or close to the house. If there are parking restrictions in place, it is important to find legal, appropriate parking for their vehicle.
ask Micheal Jackson
There is no 'standard' driveway width. Any house with enough attached land can have a driveway - the width can be as narrow as a single car, or as wide as the property boundary allows.
It depends. A grand manor may well have a driveway that has a larger area that the whole plot for a smaller house.
You destroy it and walk away.