No. It should be a stop sign.
Uncontrolled intersection
The car to the rightAnother View: Above answer is incorrect. If the intersection is uncontrolled by any signs or signal, the car which approached the intersection from the bottom leg of the tee (i.e.: the road which ended at the intersection) yields to the through-roadway.
None because without any equality signs they are not equations
None because the given terms of an expression are not equations because there are no equality signs.
Without the appropriate mathematical signs the given terms have no solutions.
At intersections without "STOP" or "YIELD" signs, slow down and be ready to stop. Yield to traffic and pedestrians already in the intersection or just entering the intersection.At "T" intersections without "STOP" or "YIELD" signs, yield to traffic and pedestrians on the through road. They have the right-of-way.
At controlled intersections, you must obey traffic signals (such as stop lights and signs) and yield the right of way to pedestrians and other vehicles as required by the signals. It is also important to be alert and check for oncoming traffic before proceeding through the intersection.
Uncontrolled intersection
Controlled intersections have traffic lights, yield signs or stop signs to control traffic. At a controlled intersection where you face a green light, drive carefully through the intersection at a steady speed. If the light has been green for a while, be prepared to stop when it turns yellow. However, if you are already so close that you cannot stop safely, drive through the intersection with caution. Where you face a red light, come to a complete stop and wait until the light turns green. When you approach an intersection on a main road, and the intersection is blocked with traffic, stop before entering the intersection and wait until the traffic ahead moves on. This does not apply if you are turning left or right. At a controlled intersection where you face a yield sign, slow down or stop if necessary and wait until the way is clear before driving through the intersection. At a controlled intersection where you face a stop sign, come to a complete stop. Drive through the intersection only when the way is clear (Diagram 2-15).
Uncontrolled
Controlled intersections have traffic lights, yield signs or stop signs to control traffic. At a controlled intersection where you face a green light, drive carefully through the intersection at a steady speed. If the light has been green for a while, be prepared to stop when it turns yellow. However, if you are already so close that you cannot stop safely, drive through the intersection with caution. Where you face a red light, come to a complete stop and wait until the light turns green. When you approach an intersection on a main road, and the intersection is blocked with traffic, stop before entering the intersection and wait until the traffic ahead moves on. This does not apply if you are turning left or right. At a controlled intersection where you face a yield sign, slow down or stop if necessary and wait until the way is clear before driving through the intersection. At a controlled intersection where you face a stop sign, come to a complete stop. Drive through the intersection only when the way is clear (Diagram 2-15).
a controlled intersection
You can help reduce accidents at intersections by slowing down, coming to a complete stop at stop signs, obeying traffic signals, yielding to other vehicles when necessary, and refraining from distracted driving. Additionally, staying alert, scanning your surroundings, and anticipating the movements of other drivers can also help prevent accidents at intersections.
The leading cause of deaths at intersections is typically attributed to car accidents, specifically those involving vehicles running red lights or stop signs, speeding, or failing to yield the right of way. Additionally, distracted driving and impaired driving contribute significantly to intersection fatalities.
They're as legal in Ohio as they are in any other state. As with all states, there will be some places where they're prohibited. You can't do them in the middle of the roadway, you typically will have to be at an intersection, and there may be some intersections with signs which prohibit U-turns at that particular intersection.
Yes, aside from intersections with signs specifically prohibiting it. UPDATE: The vehicle turning right on red also has to YIELD to traffic in the intersection. If turning right on red causes you to hit another vehicle turning left in your direction, the accident is your fault and you should have stopped to allow that vehicle to legally pass through the intersection. ALA CODE § 32-5A-32 : TRAFFIC-CONTROL SIGNAL LEGEND 3(b): Except when a sign is in place prohibiting a turn, vehicular traffic facing any steady red signal may cautiously enter the intersection to turn right, or turn left from a one-way street into a one-way street, after stopping as required by subdivisions (3)a. Such vehicular traffic shall YIELD the right of way to pedestrians lawfully within an adjacent crosswalk AND TO OTHER TRAFFIC LAWFULLY USING THE INTERSECTION.
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