When turning left, you must yield the right of way to oncoming traffic. There is no such thing as left of way, unless you are protected by a green left turn light. Always wait to see what the oncoming traffic is doing before turning left. Remember...there is no such thing as "left of way".
When turning left, you must yield the right of way to oncoming traffic. Wait for a safe gap in traffic before making your turn.
When turning left, you must yield to oncoming traffic.
Yes.unless you have a protected left turn such as with a green arrow.
Drivers turning left at an intersection must yield to oncoming traffic and pedestrians.
Yield means yield. Oncoming traffic already on the road has right of way. You merge when it is safe to do so.
If you have a red light and left turners have a green light then yes. Otherwise the general rule is those turning left yield to those turning right.
When approaching an intersection and turning right, you should yield to pedestrians and oncoming traffic. Come to a complete stop if necessary, then proceed when it is safe to do so.
It is a left turn where the turning driver must yield to oncoming traffic entering a cross-streets intersection because there is no left left turn signal facing that left-turning driver during which a red light stops oncoming traffic to protect the left turning vehicle. This holds in keep-to-the-right countries. For keep-to-left countries, there are, sometimes, protected right turns.
In many cities, a right on red is legal ONLY after you have made a full stop and there is no oncoming traffic. If you fail to stop and/or yield to traffic that has the green light, you will be charged.
At intersections, bicycles must follow the same rules as vehicles. They should yield to pedestrians and obey traffic signals. When turning, they should signal and yield to oncoming traffic. Bicycles in bike lanes have the right of way over vehicles crossing the lane.
You continue through the turn but only after you make sure that there is no oncoming traffic. It is your responsibility to yield to vehicles that are coming straight through the intersection.
When making a left turn at an intersection, the driver must yield the right-of-way to oncoming traffic.