No. That would be a 4 lane road. 2 lane road is just that 2 lanes. One in each direction.
Lanes are usually about 11-12 feet wide, so a road with two lanes (one lane going in each direction) would be between 22 and 24 feet wide. A road with two lanes in each direction would be between 44 and 48 feet wide.
The difference between a road lane and a line is the direction of travel on the roadway. In a road lane situation, there are usually two lanes divided by a white dotted line, traveling in the same direction. If there is a center line, (yellow solid or yellow dotted) the direction of travel is one lane each way.
the middle of the road
Yellow on a two way road with one lane of traffic in each direction. White on one way streets, except for restricted or turn lanes. (U.S.)
The right one (Slow Lane)... The left is for Passing
Changing of lanes is permitted, and traffic in the adjacent lane flows in the same direction.
If there are two lanes (one in each direction) why is there a need for any driver to yield). If it is a single track road, then there will be passing places (pull ins) and the driver nearest to one should be the one that uses it. In cases where a two lane road narrows to a single lane road for a short stretch, this point will either be controlled by lights or will have road signage indicating which direction of traffic has priority.
The average width of a rural two-lane road is typically between 20 to 24 feet. This width allows for two lanes of traffic, one in each direction, with enough room for vehicles to safely pass each other.
outside lane is the lane nearest edge of road inside line is lane closest to the middle of the road
The Paris ring road has usually three lanes in each direction. In some sections it has four lanes instead of three.
Multi-lane highway.
They mark the edge of the carriageway/roadway.