No
It is a car's identification
TX stands for taxi
The term BMV stands for Bureau of Motor Vehicles. The BMV handles registrations, license plates and drivers licenses, as well as state ID cards.
The "HP" symbol on Virginia license plates stands for "Handicapped Plate." It designates vehicles that are registered to individuals with disabilities, allowing them access to certain parking privileges and accommodations. This symbol helps identify vehicles eligible for designated parking spaces and other benefits under state law.
In human history no state has had to move because of the Earth's plates.
It basically means if you own the car you have to register or license the car to legally drive it in your state. They need to know who legally owns the car. You will get the new plates if it was bought from out of state and if there is an accident or the car is stolen the state will know who the registered owner is.
It inplies that the individual brightens your day. California and South Dakota have both been called the Sunshine State and Florida still uses that term on their license plates.
It depends on the state, and on what you mean. If you mean a license to carry a handgun, most, but not all states require you to be at least 21.
Those are "whiskey plates." The driver has had more than one DUI conviction.
I suspect you're screwed. Save your money, pay your fine, move on. It's the owner's responsibility to properly display license plates, and if you can't because you don't have them both, it's up to the owner to go to the appropriate authority and fix it. This assumes that you mean that it's registered in your home state, and your home state requires two plates. If it was legally registered in a another state that doesn't have two, but an over-zealous cop wrote you up for it anyway, that should be a slam dunk: what you were doing wasn't against the law.
Depends on the state, the nature of the conviction/forefeiture, and what class licence you possess. If you have a CDL, any convictions or forfeitures will follow you to most states (save for the five which are not members of the Drivers Licence Compact), although it doesn't necessarily mean that the new state will assess points from the previous state.