Could be several reasons, all of them bad. Get it checked by a mechanic now.
some cars yes (like 4 drive)
The cars in Germany have the steering wheel on the left side.
Steering wheel placement aims to put the driver closer to the middle of the road. Some countries decided differently WRT which side of the road to drive on. Cars made to be used in right-side-traffic have the steering wheels to the left, while cars made to be used in left side traffic have the steering wheel to the right.
right
It's not really about the cars being "American" or "British", it's about which side of the road they are expected to be driven. You can find LHD(left hand drive) Jaguars as well as RHD Fords. The US use right-side traffic, and almost all cars there are built with left-side steering. England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales use left-side traffic and almost all cars there are built with right-side steering.
Steering wheel placement aims to put the driver closer to the middle of the road. Some countries decided differently WRT which side of the road to drive on. Cars made to be used in right-side-traffic have the steering wheels to the left, while cars made to be used in left side traffic have the steering wheel to the right.
In Japan people drive on the left with the steering wheel on the right.
you steering wheel starts shaking because you probably have warped roders your shaking will get worse at higher speeds and when pressing the brake
Yes that is correct
It depends on the type of vehicle and the steering system that it has. If the vehicle has rack and pinion steering, it may be a bad rack and pinion. If the vehicle has a steering gear, like most older cars of pickup trucks, It could have a bad steering gear.
It could be on either side, but the turn signal lever is almost always on the same side of the steering column as the steering column is on the side of the car. Earlier cars have it as a twist grip on the end of the turn signal lever. Newer ones often have the control as a separate lever on the opposite side of the steering column.
The UK drives on the left side of the road and cars normally have the steering wheel on the right side of the vehicle.