On an undivided highway (no center barriers or median strip), a double yellow line separates traffic coming in both directions. On state routes, you might see intermittent broken line next to a solid yellow. If the broken line is on your side, you may pass---but all of your car must be back in your lane before it returns to a double solid line.
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Yellow.
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.
Traffic in the lane opposite the yellow line travels in the opposing direction.
That is false. At least in America. Solid yellow lines are the means to separate traffic traveling in an opposite direction. A solid white line marks the outside edge of your lane, or the outside edge of the lane traveling in your direction. Meaning you'll either go into the shoulder, or off the road entirely, if you go over the solid white line.
double solid white lines
Generally it means that the cars on the other side of the line will be travelling in the opposite direction as you are. A white line means that the traffic is facing the same direction as you, or that there is no travel across the line (shoulder).
This person above is completely wrong. Yellow lines represent traffic coming in the opposite direction. Solid yellow lines represent no passing. that's the law not my opinion
The broken white lines down the middle of the road serves as the separate lines of traffic or to protect any traffic that may be turning right.
When two parallel solid yellow lines separate lanes of traffic, the only legal maneuver you can perform is turning left into a driveway on the opposite side of the road.