At a T intersection, the vehicle on the through road has the right of way over vehicles on the terminating road.
Street ending at a "T" intersection.
When a pedestrian is present at an intersection, the pedestrian has the right of way.
At an intersection, the car that arrives first or the car on the right typically has the right of way.
If it is an un-controlled intersection, the vehicle to the right has the right-of-way. In North America , the vehicle approaching the intersection on the right has the right of way, Yield to the car on your right.
The right of way is given in a traffic intersection, not taken.
Yes, when approaching an intersection, you must yield the right of way to other vehicles or pedestrians if you do not have the right of way.
At an intersection, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two vehicles arrive at the same time, the vehicle on the right has the right of way.
At an intersection, you have the right-of-way when you arrive first or when there are no traffic signs or signals indicating otherwise.
You should make a right turn at a two-way intersection when you have the right of way and it is safe to do so.
You must determine the right of way at an intersection when you approach it to know who has the legal right to proceed first.
It depends on the intersection. In the U.S.: At a four way stop, who ever got there first has the right to go first, even when turning left. If you have a green left turn arrow you have the right of way to turn left. With a solid green light only, or no stop signs, yield to drivers going straight, or if someone is turning right into the same lane you are turning left into, if you got there at the same time, let them go first, they are closer to that lane than you.
- A driver approaching an intersection must yield the right-of-way to traffic already in the intersection. (traffic in the intersection has the right of way) - If drivers are approaching an intersection from opposite directions, the driver turning left must yield to approaching traffic going straight or turning right. (traffic going straight or turning right has the right-of-way) - Two drivers at an intersection that arrived at the same time at a right angle. The driver on the left must yield the right-of way. ( the driver on the right has the right of way) -Never insist on the right-away