Yes, standing behind the vehicle, the left is driver, right is passenger
It would be the Drivers side.
no. not unless it is a UPS truck.
In the US and many other countries the drivers side is left side, in the UK, and other countries, the driver sits on the right. You always look from the "behind the wheel" viewpoint.
depends on which way it's facing relative to you and also what country you're in. wrong. It is determined by the drivers perspective. This is the automotive industry standard and it doesn't matter if you are in the US, europe, or japan. When you are sitting in the drivers seat of the car the left side is where your left arm is, and the right side is near your right arm.
right
Bottom of the left side (US drivers side) of the dash panel behind a plastic panel.
In US cars (which drive on the right), the right side of the car is the passenger's side. In the UK and other places (where they drive to the left), the right side is where the driver sits.
The sides (left or right) of any vehicle in the US is always in relation to the seated driver. The right side therefore is the passenger side.
On the right side.
US drivers drive on the right side of the road.
The RIGHT hand side...
yes