That depends on which side of the road you are driving. Some countries drive on the opposite side of the road to the country in which you live and as you have not made it clear which country you live in we can not answer your question.
The lane nearest the center of the road
When turning onto a road with two or more lanes you should turn into the nearest lane. If the road you are turning from has two lanes marked for turning left there will usually be broken lane lines through the turn to show the lanes you should stay in. If they are worn away the furthest lane left turns into the nearest lane and the second lane from the left turns into the second lane from the left of the road you are turning onto. Once on the new road and it is clear you can start changing lanes. Its a bad idea to change lanes during the turn as if there is an accident you could be ticketed for an unsafe lane change
When you are in the far right lane, your turn should put you in the far right lane. Then, when safe, you can merge into the left lane to pass. This is for a right turn from a 2 or 4 lane onto a 2-or higher lane road.
Its rare. But only if you're in the left hand lane of a one-way road at a stop light, and you're turning left onto another one-way road.
the vehicle on the interstate has the right of way. The vehicle that is trying to merge onto the highway must yield to the traffic that is already there. It obviously depends on where you are and the local instructions there. What if you are turning onto a road in the right lane and the traffic in the left lane comes into the right lane and hits you. Who is at fault?
left... ...but do not impede existing traffic, and move to the right lane as soon as it is safe to do so.
Unless the markings on the road clearly indicate otherwise - on a right turn you turn into the right lane; likewise, on a left turn you turn into the left lane. You always turn into the nearest lane whether it is a right or left turn.
No, you should not turn left from the center lane of a three-lane one-way street onto a two-lane one-way street. You should turn from the left lane if you want to turn left onto another street.
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.
From the rightmost lane a right turn should end in the rightmost lane. If more than one lane permits a right turn then it should end in the corresponding lane from the right. Just imagine as if the turn was on a curved road linking the two roads (this also applies for left turns) with a one to one lane correspondence between the turning lanes of the road you are on and the ending lanes in the road you end up in, assuming that there is moving traffic in all of the turn lanes that you must not collide with during the turn.
On a two lane road with a center lane, the center lane is used for left turns going either direction. If on a 4 lane road with a center divider then the left lane is where you should be, unless there is a left turn pocket at the intersection. If on a two lane road with no center lane then you execute the left turn from the forward travel lane that you are in. In all cases be certain to use your turn indicators to let those following you know of your intentions.
== == == ==
Park Lane Road in London, EnglandPark Lane Road in London, EnglandPark Lane Road in London, EnglandPark Lane Road in London, EnglandPark Lane Road in London, England