far left
When you are in the far right lane, your turn should put you in the far right lane. Then, when safe, you can merge into the left lane to pass. This is for a right turn from a 2 or 4 lane onto a 2-or higher lane road.
The left lane.
The far right lane. On multiple lane highways, the lanes are counted from the left to right -- the fast lane is #1. So if you are on a 4-lane drive in #4. This applies to The US and right-side drive road, left side driver cars
Depends on what state your in. In some states the far left lane is used primarily for Emergency Vehicles and a passing lane. In California you can travel in that lane as long as you move to the right if an Emergency Vehicle comes up behind you. According to the Florida handbook, "if the road has 4 or more lanes with two-way traffic, drive in the right lanes except when overtaking or passing." Or when you're carpooling.Overtaking and passing.When passing.When passing slower moving traffic.
In general you should drive in the right lane and use the left lane only to pass when necessary. (On some stretches of I-20 and I-35 you'll see this posted.) If traffic is heavy, you should stay in the lane that's going the speed you want to drive; usually this is slower in the right lane and faster in the left lane. If by "four lane road" you mean four lanes in each direction, that's personal preference -- I leave the far left to the speed demons, the far right to people getting on and off, and second from the right to the tractor-trailers; my preference is second from the left. The goal is to allow traffic to flow smoothly. Going too slow in the "fast" lane causes traffic to back up (and get mad at you), and rapid lane changes can cause accidents. Pick a lane and stick to it, and go the same speed as those around you -- if everyone did this, we'd all get there on time.
You should always only turn from the lane closest to the direction you wish to turn. For example you will turn only from the far left lane if you are turning to the left. If you wish to turn right then you will have to do this from the far right lane only.
Depends on what state your in. In some states the far left lane is used primarily for Emergency Vehicles and a passing lane. In California you can travel in that lane as long as you move to the right if an Emergency Vehicle comes up behind you. According to the Florida handbook, "if the road has 4 or more lanes with two-way traffic, drive in the right lanes except when overtaking or passing" or if the exit you need to take is shortly on the left. Overtaking and/or passing.
When making a right turn you are to execute the maneuver from the far left hand lane to the far right hand lane. This will also depend with the direction you intend to take after the right turn.
When making a right turn you are to execute the maneuver from the far left hand lane to the far right hand lane. This will also depend with the direction you intend to take after the right turn.
Merge into the nearest left lane when it is safe to do so.
On the right hand side (same as the US and Canada) When I was there in 1992, they drove practically wherever they felt like it ... on sidewalks, over curbs, executed left turns from the far right hand lane. Normally though, as stated above, they drive on the right side of the road as we do in the US ... most cars are left hand drive.
yes