Looking at the vehicle from the rear, the driver sits on the right, and drives in the left-hand lane on two lane roads.
No
In US cars (which drive on the right), the right side of the car is the passenger's side. In the UK and other places (where they drive to the left), the right side is where the driver sits.
In the United Kingdom, the drivers seat in their vehicles is on the right side. The style and methods of driving are also different in the United Kingdom.
They're not. Did you mean in UK.
We drive on the left, so use rhd cars.
The UK drives on the left side of the road and cars normally have the steering wheel on the right side of the vehicle.
As an Englishman and a driver I can speak with some authority on this subject, the English will always drive on the correct side of the road for the country they are actually driving in, if you asking about which side of the road we drive on in England then the answer is 'we drive on the left'.
The UK law says that if a cue of cars builds up behind the tractor the driver should pull over to let cars pass.
The driver of the turning car should YEILD as the car driving straight has the right of way. In Canada anyway.In the UK also
Oh, well, this actually depends on, if you count the UK as belonging to Europe or not ... In countries, that drive on the right side of the road, the driver´s side is the left side .. in the UK its the right side, since they drive on the left. I´m not aware that mail trucks differ from other vehicles in this. Trucks that clean the roads, however, sometimes do. They have the steering wheel on the "wrong" side, so its easier for the driver to navigate around parked cars ...
Well if you mean right hand drive than that would be cars such as Nissan, Toyota,Suzuki,Bentley,jaguar,BMW,and Kia just to name a few and these would be cars built in the uk,japan,and Korea