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.
That depends on how signage is placed at the intersection. If the road entering the T has a stop or yield sign, and the road which forms the top of the T does not, then the road with no control signs has right of way. All sides of the intersection have stop signs, it's treated the same way a four way stop intersection would be treated - first vehicle to stop at the intersection has right of way, and the vehicle to the right has right-of-way in the event of two vehicles coming to the intersection simultaneously.
A pedestrian, followed by someone not at the yield sign.
Who ever is there first. If that is not the case, then straight, right hand turns, then left.
The driver to whom the Yield sign is displayed must give-way to traffic on the other roadway.
The person who arrives first has the right away. If you both get there at the same time, then the person to the right has the right away.
First, it is called 'right of way', and the car to one's right has the right of way (Note the two different meanings of 'right'). A car already in the intersection has the right of way, also.
no one in floridea
The vehicle that is going straight has the right of way.
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.
Street ending at a "T" intersection.
All traffic turning right now has to give way to a vehicle coming from the opposite direction and turning left; and at an uncontrolled T-intersection, all traffic from a terminating road (the bottom of the T) will be required to give way to traffic on the continuing road (top of the T). "The top of the T goes before me."
The straight road you are on ends at a "T" intersection (road that goes right and left).
The straight road you are on ends at a "T" intersection (road that goes right and left).
At a t intersection you basically come to a stop, but you are supposed to "yeild" (its smart to come to a short 1-2 second pause) and look for traffic and go when appropriate. If you come to a t intersection when another car on the main road (top of the t) is turning onto the road you are on, the car on the left lets the car on the right have the right-of-way. Let me know if this helps! if not i can go into MUCH more detail.
The intersection of two sets S and T is the set of all elements that belong to both S and T.
Car B is at fault
To finish the mission you have to just keep driving as fast as you can. The way I do it is at the start turn left straight away. Follow this road over the bridge and over the second bridge. Still following this road go past the North Point Mall and at the T-intersection turn left. At the next T-intersection turn right. Keep following this road, going through the S-bend at the Malibu club. At the 5-way intersection turn straight ahead to the right. When on this road turn right and go over the bridge. By now the bomb should be defused. Remember you have to do all this going flat out! Hope this makes sense.
3 way junction Advanced stop line Bowtie Box junction Channelization Cloverleaf Interchange Continuous flow intersection Crossroads Diamond interchange Diverging Diamond interchange Divided diamond interchange Double Crossover Merging Interchange Dumbbell interchange Fork Free flow interchange Interchange Intersection Jughandle Michigan left Partial Cloverleaf interchange Pedestrian separation structure Quadrant roadway intersection Right in/Right out Roundabout Roundabout interchange Seagull intersection Single point urban interchange Slip lane Stack interchange Staggered junction Superstreet Texas T Texas Uturn Three level diamond interchange Traffic circle Truck bypass Turnaround Uncontrolled intersection Unused highway Windmill interchange
At a four way intersection with four stop signs, the first driver there has the right of way. At this same intersection, if you arrive at the same time as a driver beside you, the person to the right has right of way. At a two stop sign intersection, the drivers on the cross street with no stop sign have right of way. The first person to either stop sign has right of way. If you arrive at the stop sign at the same time as someone across with a stop sign and one of you is turning left, the other person has the right of way. At a T intersection with no stop sign, the person at the top of T has right of way. Any person on the road has right of way over anyone coming out of a driveway or parking lot. A person going forward has right of way over a driver going in reverse. A driver on the freeway has right of way over those merging onto freeway. A driver in their lane has right of way over a driver making a lane change into their lane. A driver with a green light, going straight, has right of way over drivers or pedestrians crossing the street. At an intersection with no signs or signals, a driver to the right has right of way. At an intersection with no signal lights a pedestrian has right of way. *These are based on the laws in the state of Oregon. Other states and territories may be slightly different.