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On the side of the road you normally drive on. If the wind is THAT strong that you are unable to keep it under control, park it, The conditions are too unsafe to operate.
It depends on how fast you are driving and on whether you stop during the drive.
Obviously if it is a two-land road there is one lane in each direction, so the law dictates which side--right in most of the world, left in the U. K. If there are two lanes for the direction you are going, you still have to consider other traffic even if you do have a crosswind. If I were on a multi-lane road with no other traffic and a strong crosswind, I would drive in the up-wind lane so if a gust blew me to the side, it would be to another lane, not to the shoulder or the median.
If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.If they have a driving license, then they can drive in Ireland.
will drive: I will drive to work tomorrow.
The root word for the verb "driving" is "drive."
The present tense of the verb "drive" is actually "drive."
Everything depends on: how you drive - the passengers or loads you carry - the conditions you are driving in - whether your AWD (All Wheel Drive) is engaged a good portion of the time - and whether you are in urban or highway driving environments. I own a 2000 2WD CR-V with about 88,000 miles and average about 22-24 MPG.
Will drive or will be driving.
Driving?
No but driving can be an adjective as in, "He walked in the driving rain".