She would be arrested for performing an illegal activity, i.e. driving.
Just because an activity in Country A is legal does not mean than the person from that Country A is able to live according to Country A's rules in Country B. The person has to live acording to the rules of Country B and will be penalized according to Country B's laws for failure to comply. Conversely, if something is legal in Country B, but illegal in Country A, a person from Country A who goes to Country B can perform the activity without worry since only Country B's laws apply. Extraterriorality, i.e. having the laws of a different jurisdiction apply to certain people, does not exist except in certain areas under military occupation.
Washington's Farewell Address
Depends on how high the cliff is and if your in the car at the time
They drove the carrying of trade to foreign ships, hurting the U.S. Merchant Marine fleet.
I'm not quite sure what lay at the root. However, anti-Semitism and returning the German race to its former glory was definitely what drove his plan. This drove him to his expansionist foreign policy and his repressive domestic policy. (repressive to Jews and non-Aryans that is.)
1954 Jaguar xk 120
You would likely be arrested.
Yes, the noun 'drove' is used for a group moving from one place to another.The noun 'drove' is a standard collective nounfor:a drove of bullocksa drove of cattlea drove of donkeys (or asses)a drove of goatsa drove of haresa drove of hogsa drove of horsesa drove of oxena drove of pigsa drove of rabbitsa drove of sheepa drove of swineand large groups of people that are in motion.
The noun 'drove' is a collective noun for: a drove of asses a drove of cattle a drove of donkeys a drove of goats a drove of hares a drove of horses a drove of oxen a drove of pigs a drove of rabbits a drove of sheep The noun 'shelf' is a collective noun for: a shelf of books
The noun 'drove' is used for a group moving from one place to another.The noun 'drove' is a standard collective noun for:a drove of bullocksa drove of cattlea drove of donkeys (or asses)a drove of goatsa drove of haresa drove of hogsa drove of horsesa drove of oxena drove of pigsa drove of rabbitsa drove of sheepa drove of swineand large groups of people that are in motion.
On July 4, 1863, Union troops crossed the Mississippi River and drove the Confederate troops out of Vicksburg.
They get slightly better city mileage then conventional cars. They would help reduce foreign oil dependence if people drove them.
Drove and Stopped are the verbs in that sentence.