It means it was your right to turn?
You have to yield the right away if there is a sign that states it or for any emergency vehicles.
Yield to right of way
When you enter traffic from a stopped and position, always yield the right of way to
It means that you have to yield, or stop, for the driver that has the right of way.
Means that you blocked the road for someone who had the right to drive right by.
The car on the left. The car on the right has to yield. Wrong section btw.
Other vehicle in intersection goes before you do
Car turning right has the right away. Car turning from left has to yield the right away to cars coming strait or turning right this is the law in all 50 states
"Yield the Right Of Way" means that the vehicle on the intersecting roadway to your right (at a stop sign) has the legal right of way and they should go before you do. On entering a highway (freeway) by an 'on ramp', the vehicle which is already traveling down the road you are merging onto has the "Right Of Way" and you are required to yield to their vehicle when entering traffic. Most drivers will move over and let you in, so not to disrupt the flow of traffic, but they are not required by law to do so. You are required by law to yield them the right of way because you are entering their lane of travel (their Right Of Way) in traffic.
That you are not spelling it right.. Dunke shane will yield the answer..It means thank you
A driver should yield the right-of-way to pedestrians:
"Yield" means to give something to somebody who demands it. "Right of way" means the right to go through some place (like an intersetion.) If you see a "Yield" sign as you enter some kind of intersection, it means that somebody else (not you) has the right of way, and you must yield it to them. In the U.S.A., a YIELD sign means the same thing as a STOP sign except you don't have to stop---all you have to do is keep out of the other guy's way, and you're golden.