Broken Yellow lines
A double solid white line is used to define a traffic lane where travel in the same direction is permitted on both sides of the line but no changing or crossing of lanes.
double solid white lines
No, you would use a series of dashes, not a solid line, to separate lanes of traffic which move in the same direction, and allow changes of lane. A solid line indicates lanes of traffic moving in opposite directions, and should not be crossed.
yes
yes
yes
Because traffic comes from that direction. That is only with left hand traffic. With right hand traffic, must first look left.
Yellow lines typically separate traffic moving in opposite directions, while white lines separate lanes of traffic moving in the same direction. Yellow lines are used to indicate no passing zones, where passing is unsafe or prohibited, while white lines indicate lane boundaries or areas where lane changes are permitted.
'Crossing traffic' means the traffic that is crossing in front of you moving left to right and vice-versa.
Yellow.
Changing of lanes is permitted, and traffic in the adjacent lane flows in the same direction.
Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge was created in 1888.