It will encourage the Lithuanians.
When a man gets out of a moving bus, he needs to run in the same direction as the bus for a certain distance because of inertia. The man and the bus are both moving at the same speed, so by running in the same direction, he can match the speed of the bus and reduce the relative speed between himself and the bus, making it safer to come to a stop. Running in the opposite direction could result in him falling or injuring himself.
Yes, a bus can change the direction of its velocity when traveling with constant acceleration. This change in velocity can occur when the bus is accelerating in the opposite direction to its initial velocity. The bus will slow down, stop, and then start moving in the opposite direction.
If a bus runs opposite northeast, it would be traveling south southwest.
The boy will fall in the direction of the bus's motion due to inertia. As the bus moves forward, the boy's inertia will keep him moving in the same direction until gravity pulls him back down.
Yes it can; if travelling east at any speed and the driver applies the brakes then the bus will decelerate, that is, accelerate in the opposite direction, which is west.
No. No, but you should check your local driving laws just in case.
According to the Missouri driver's manual, you do not have to stop if your are traveling in the opposite direction of a school bus on any road having four or more lanes. In fact, it is illegal for a bus driver to permit students to cross multiple lanes of traffic.
No because you are not allowed to cross a 4 lane road.
"The children were running to the bus stop." The verb phrase is "were running."
The package on the seat slides backward because of inertia. As the bus accelerates forward, the package wants to remain at rest (due to its initial inertia), causing it to move in the opposite direction of the bus's acceleration. This results in the package sliding backward relative to the bus.
Yes, the address bus is uni-directional.
the one direction bus