On public roads, drivers have a general presumption of how vehicles will behave in particular circumstances. If you are driving on a main road, and see an oncoming vehicle waiting to turn to his left across the traffic, you have the reasonable presumption that you have right of way, while the other car will remain stationary until you have passed, at least. At traffic lights, you expect the car facing the green light to have right of way. As a third example, you can expect to wait on the side road while cars on the main road have passed, before you turn onto the main road.
When approaching a junction with a right of way sign, the vehicles on the road with the right of way sign have the right of way over vehicles on intersecting roads.
The plural of right-of-way is "rights-of-way".
Rights of way is the plural form of that phrase.
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 a 2-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a two-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a 2-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
At a two-way stop, the driver who arrives first has the right of way. If two drivers arrive at the same time, the driver on the right has the right of way.
The right way to address the wrong is to tell the truth. The truth may hurt but it is the right way.
Car on the right.
Right This Way was created in 1938.
No, it is called a right of way because people have a legal unfettered right of way