take your foot off the gas pedal
Wait to see what they do NEVER ASSUME and use you escape route (the sholder of the road).
Slow down and if possible come almost to a stop. While still moving, steer back onto the road. The danger in steering back onto the road at a higher speed is that you might loose control and cross the road into opposing traffic and a possible collision.
Turn left out of Station Road, onto Loampit Vale. Turn right onto Thurston Road, and follow the road until you get to Blackheath Road (A2). Turn left at the junction towards Peckham and Central London. There's a one way system, so turn left onto Amersham Road, and then right onto Jerrard Street. Turn right onto Lewisham Way, where you will continue on New Cross Road (A2). Follow the road, you should pass New Cross Bus Garage. Turn right at the traffic lights, there should be a pub called The White Hart. Follow the A2 onto Old Kent Road, and then turn right at the fork two miles ahead onto New Kent Road, coming off the A2. At the A302, take the second exit onto St. Georges Road, signs for Westminster and Tower Hamlets. Continue onto Westminster Bridge Road. Turn left onto York Road (A302). At the roundabout, take the second exit onto Waterloo Road, signs for Waterloo and Blackfriars. Follow the road until the junction with The Strand (A4), signs for Stockwell and Tower Hill. Keep right on the fork, and turn onto Waterloo Place (A4). Continue on Piccadilly Circus signs for Shoreditch and Oxford Street. Turn left at the junction onto Oxford Street.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "turn onto a road". It would be more common to use the name of a specific road or to say "the road" rather than "a road".Examples:To get there, you go about one mile, and then you turn onto the road just past the railroad tracks.You go straight for 1.5 miles and then you turn onto Raleigh Road.
I looked, I listened, I stepped onto the road, I crossed the road.
no
Let your foot off the gas, no brake, gently coast back onto the road.
Let your foot off the gas, no brake, gently coast back onto the road.
When you are in the far right lane, your turn should put you in the far right lane. Then, when safe, you can merge into the left lane to pass. This is for a right turn from a 2 or 4 lane onto a 2-or higher lane road.
Look out for falling rocks. The area along the road is unstable and rocks could fall loose onto the roadway. The sign is warning that you should be vigilant for objects in the road.
yes
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.