Yes.
Yes.
Yes. You have to be traveling with the flow of traffic. A bicycle is considered a vehicle therefore all the same moving laws of a car apply to a bicycle while on the road.
It is not necessary to have a driver's licence to ride a bicycle on the street in the US. You can be given tickets for violating traffic laws, and in some states you can be arrested for DUI while riding a bicycle.
No, you are not required to be licensed to ride a bicycle, but if you are using the street, you are subject to the same traffic laws as a motor vehicle.
no, it is not, if ure riding on the street you have to obey the traffic laws, if ure riding on the sidewalk you must obey the pedestrian traffic laws.
When walking on the street (if it is legal) and there is no sidewalk, always walk on the side of ONCOMING traffic(that is walk against the flow). If riding a bicycle ride with the flow of traffic.
From memory, I estimate that Walthamstow High Street first had traffic lights half way down. As a schoolboy, I remember riding my bicycle from Willow Walk across the High Strret to Palmerston Road.
Of course not
Quentin!
If you can keep up with cars you pretty much have the same rights they do last I heard. Left turn lanes are available to you also, but you need to stay up with traffic, or it's just dangerous. I would think if you impede, slow down traffic, you could be cited or warned. Cars that go too slow can receive a ticket for impeding traffic also.Some states have designated bicycle paths on and off the road. Some states say that if you ride a bicycle in the road, you must abide by all road rules as if you were driving a car.They have the same responsibilities or "rights" as all other traffic.
It generally refers to a side street that intersects with a major thoroughfare. The traffic on the major street is heavy, so traffic on the cross street usually has to stop.