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Yielding the right of way means allowing another vehicle to enter an intersection before doing so yourself. However, yielding the right of way doesnt exclude pedestrians and cyclists on the road. When a driver yields the right of way, they are granting immediate use of the intersection to the other vehicle first.
Yielding the right of way essentially refers to allowing another vehicle, pedestrian, or bicyclist to enter an intersection before you. The idea behind yielding the right of way is to help mitigate accidents, particularly at intersections where no traffic light is present.
The right of way is the total land area acquired for the construction of the roadway. Its width should be enough to accommodate all the elements of the roadway cross section, any future widening of the road and any public utility facilities that will be installed along the roadway.
Multi-lane rural highways in Texas must be at least 12 feet wide. No median should be wider than 60 feet at intersections in suburban areas, except to accommodate larger vehicles when turning and crossing, at which point their desired width should be 76 feet to give enough space for tractor-trailers to maneuver.
If you docHub an uncontrolled intersection at close to the same time, the vehicle who actually docHubed the intersection last is the driver who must yield the right of way. If you docHub the intersection at the same time, the driver on the left should yield the right of way.
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The first car to arrive has the right of way, which means you must yield to a driver who arrived before you. When three vehicles arrive simultaneously, the vehicle to the right still has the right of way, and the car furthest left must go last.
Right of way must be yielded to other drivers in the following instances: At a yield sign; To pedestrians in a crosswalk; To persons using a seeing eye guide dog; To persons using a white cane with or without a red tip; At uncontrolled intersections where vehicles are already in the intersection;
A left turn yield on green sign at an intersection means drivers in the left turn lane may make a left turn on a green arrow and also on a green light after yielding to oncoming traffic. Once the green arrow changes to a regular green light, the left-hand turn lane no longer has the right of way.
Right of Way Rules At standard 4-way intersection, right-of-way first goes to any vehicles or pedestrians currently entering the intersection. Following that, right-of-way is given to the vehicle on your right. However, 3-way intersections follow a different set of right-of-way rules.
A private Right of Way (sometimes called an easement) typically gives one land owner the right to cross or use anothers property, usually a road or pathway of some kind, to get to and from their land or other point. This right is usually given in the form of a deed, much like a deed to property.

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