The left lane.
You should have the same number of lanes to the left of you after executing the turn as you do before you execute the turn. If there are none to your left before you execute the turn, then you should end up in the far left lane upon completion of the turn.
When completing a left turn, you may turn into any available lane of the cross-street if it is safe to do so. Remember, if vehicles are turning right from opposing traffic, those turning right have the right-of-way into their corresponding lanes
That depends. On a two-lane road, your left turn should keep you inside the right lane where you are turning. On a road with two left turn lanes, merging into a 2+ lane road, and you are in the far left turning lane, both lanes of traffic stay in their current lanes -- so you would still be in the left lane after the turn -- this is only on multiple lane roadways. After you complete the turn, you can merge into the right lane when safe to do so and if permitted.
Assuming you're in a country which drives on the right (such as the USA, Canada, etc.), you would turn into the most righthand lane of travel.
You should use the right most lane.
the truck lane or the left lane
the left lane
Always turn in to the lane closest to you (e.g. making a right turn onto a highway you should turn into the right lane).Turning from the highway depends upon which you are going, if left turns are premitted (some require left turns from the right lane only) So you must check the rules for that particular road. Unless there are other vehicles trying to come on to the intersection then you should just simply move to the left.
A shared left lane is used to turn left by both directions of traffic. A regular left lane is only used by one direction flow of traffic
If the lane is specifically marked as a Left Turn Only lane then yes.
If it is a shared TRAVEL lane - the threat is oncoming traffic coming right at you head on. If it is a shared TURN lane, you must be cautious that someone from the opposite lane of travel doesn't suddenly decide to turn left at the same you want to turn left, and you wind up sharing the same portion of the lane.
Any turn going left from any of the right lanes is an illegal turn. However, if you signal into any of the two left lanes (assuming the white lines are dashed and not solid), you can make a legal left turn from any of the two left turn lanes. Treat it like a four-laned intersection without the street lights and without a lane going straight. You must turn into your lane accordingly.
The one which will be the outside lane. If it's a left turn, they'll be in the right lane. If it's a right turn, they'll be in the left turn lane.
If you are turning left from a one way street onto another one way street, you can make a left on red. However, they must both be one way streets.You can turn left from either lane so long as you continue into the current lane you are in. As in if you are in the right lane, you must turn left and stay in the furthest right lane. And vise versa.Added: CAUTION - not all states allow left hand turns on red under the circumstances described in the question - unless allowed by posted sign or appropriate traffic signal display.
A "Center left turn lane".
right lane
left... ...but do not impede existing traffic, and move to the right lane as soon as it is safe to do so.
Yes, as long as there isn't another lane for turning right. You can turn right when you are not allowed to turn left.