Questions:
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When can you overtake on the left?
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At an uncontrolled junction of equal importance to whom should you give way?
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At a stop sign that has no white line, where should you stop?
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What position would you take up for a right turn in a one-way street?
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How would you turn right on a main road?
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How would you know a zebra crossing at night?
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What does the island in the centre of a pedestrian crossing mean?
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What restrictions are there in relation to the use of the horn?
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When driving at night when should you dip your headlights?
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What should you do if dazzled by lights of an oncoming car?
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What is a clearway?
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What does a broken yellow line mean?
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What does a single yellow mean?
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What is the legal parking distance from the kerb?
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How close to a junction can you park?
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Where should you not park?
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Where should you not overtake?
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What is the two second rule?
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If you saw a red triangle on the road, what would it mean?
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What is the sequence of traffic lights?
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At an uncontrolled junction, who has the right of way?
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What does a green light mean?
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What does an amber light mean?
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Name three people in authority for whom you must stop.
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If you were entering a one-way street at the no entry end, what road markings would you see?
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When can you cross a continuous line?
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(a) What is the speed limit on a national primary road? (b) What is the motorway speed limit? (c) What is the minimum tyre depth?
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What rules apply to a junction box?
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If there are two sets of white lines in the centre of the road, on continuous and one broken which would you obey?
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What do two sets of broken white lines in the centre of the road mean?
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What does a broken white line in the centre of the road mean?
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What do white horizontal lines in the centre of the road mean?



Answers:
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When the driver in front of you is turning right, when you intend to turn left, when the vehicles in the lane on your right are moving slower
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Give way to traffic on the right and proceed with caution.
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At the stop sign
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The extreme right lane
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Mirror and signal and then move into the right-hand lane when clear, keeping left of the white line in the centre of the road. When a safe gap occurs, complete your turn, never cut corners and give way to pedestrians
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By yellow flashing beacons
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Each side of the island is a separate crossing
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It must not be used between the hours of 11:30pm and 7:00am in a built-up area, except in an emergency.
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(a) when meeting oncoming traffic (b) When following close behind another vehicle (c) On continuously lit roads (d) In snow, fog dusk/dawn
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Slow down and stop if necessary
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Stopping and area prohibited (except by buses and taxis) for the period indicated on the sign
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A broken yellow line marks the edge of the road
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No parking at certain times
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Half a metre
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5 metres
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Near a bend, the brow of a hill, a humpback bridge, a continuous white line, where your vehicle would obstruct a sign, at an entrance, at a bus stop, opposite another vehicle, on a narrow road or taxi rank
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At a bend, a junction, brow of a hill, a humpback bridge, a continuous white line or anywhere your view of oncoming traffic is restricted
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Stay two seconds behind the car in front. Use a stationary object on the road, start counting when the car in front passes the object and you should pass after counting two seconds
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That there is an obstruction on the road ahead
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Green, amber, red
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Take it that no one has the right of way and proceed only when it is safe to do so.
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Go, providing junction is clear
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Stop unless you are too close to stop safely
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A Garda, a school warden or a person in charge of animals
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A continuous white line with a broken white line behind it
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To avoid an obstruction, for access, or if there is a broken white line on your side of the road
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(a) 100 kph (b) 120 kph (c) 1.6mm
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You cannot enter unless your way ahead is clear with the exception of turning right, you can enter and wait in the box if you are not obstructing other traffic
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You obey the line on your side of the road
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There will be one or two continuous lines ahead
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You may overtake if safe to do so
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You use them like a traffic island – you do not enter
