put your hands in front of your face top of hands so you can see them.
tuck all fingers back but your finger closest to your thumb and your thumb, while keeping those too straight.
slide your thumbs closer to each other without moving your hands themselves, making an L on one hand.
that is left.
the other is right.
When approaching a junction with a right of way sign, the vehicles on the road with the right of way sign have the right of way over vehicles on intersecting roads.
The plural of right-of-way is "rights-of-way".
Rights of way is the plural form of that phrase.
Yes, when approaching an intersection, you must yield the right of way to other vehicles or pedestrians if you do not have the right of way.
At a 2-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a two-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a 2-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a two-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
The right way to address the wrong is to tell the truth. The truth may hurt but it is the right way.
At a 2-way stop intersection, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a 3-way stop intersection, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a two-way stop intersection, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.