where ever the parking lot is.
fifteen feet
10 feet, dont park near it unless you want a hoseline run through your car.
About the length of a firetruck would make common sense. Access to that fire hydrant could mean the difference of life and death of people if there is a fire near by. Most cities will have painted the curb red around hydrants.
Most U.S. states require at least 15 feet between a fire hydrant and a parked car. Some require more, like California, which requires 20.
You cannot park within 10 feet of a fire hydrant.
1 metre
A noun clause is a group of words that contains a noun or pronoun and a verb but is an incomplete thought that can't stand on it's own. A noun clause can perform the function of a noun as the subject of a sentence and the object of a verb or a preposition. Example:My car is the one parked next to the fire hydrant.What you want is the best quality that you can afford.A noun phrase is any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb, or a prepositional. A noun phrase can be one word or many words. Examples:She is nice.The board meeting is at two.I brought some of my mother's homemade cookies.Answer: In the example sentence, "My car is the one parked next to the fire hydrant," the noun phrase "the one parked next to the fire hydrant" contains a verb "parked." If you remove the verb, it becomes the noun phrase "the one next to the fire hydrant."
A hydrant is an attachment valve from a water main used by the fire department. One of the key features commonly found is an poppet shutoff that usually works to shut off the water if a car hits the hydrant.
ummm... i guess soo... cuz its ur fault u parked there?
It is illegal to park a car in front of a fire hydrant.
15 feet
This has nothing to do with corporations.
Standard distance for parking from hydrant is 2 car lengths. Page 67 of the Maryland Drivers Handbook states you must be 15 feet from a fire hydrant, that is about 1 car length.