it is more common for drivers to swerve to the right when driving a right wheel drive, or left if left wheel drive, because they automatically try to protect themselves from the oncoming collision, but that is only for a stationary object. if you are talking about anything, then it depends where the object is.
yes it's just more common to get in on the left side :) I get on the right side
Not necessarily. A lot of famous artists are known to be both left and right handed. There is no record on whether or not most mathematicians are left or right handed.
Arabic, Hebrew, Urdu, and Persian. In some occasions, Greek, Latin, Chinese, and Japanese are written right to left. Writing right to left is more common in the Middle East.
Tuberculosis seems to be more common in the right lung rather than the left lung due to the short right trachea. Anatomically the left trachea is longer than the right one due to the position of the heart and the major vessels. As a result microbes can more easily navigate to the right lung rather than the left lung.
I'm not sure but I would say "Left brained". They say that the left side of your brain controls the right side of your body and the right side of your brain controls the left side. Most people are right handed and their dominant eye is their right one. Therefore I would guess it's the left.
Some health care providers are more likely to give shots in the left arm because right-handedness is more common. There is no reason to have a preference in medical terms.
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Most tools are designed for use by the more common right-handed person. A left-handed either uses such tools rather awkwardly, or buys tools specially made for left-handed people. For instance, scissors can be bought in left or right handed versions.
the right
More people write with there right than they do with there left.
left
The right main bronchus is wider, shorter, and more vertical than the left main bronchus, and it enters the right lung at roughly the level of the fifth thoracic vertebra.In contrast, the left main bronchus is smaller in size, but longer in length than the right main bronchus. The left main bronchus enters the root of the left lung opposite to the sixth thoracic vertebra, passes underneath the aortic arch.