| Traffic Light |
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| Thursday, 05 November 2009 01:34 | |||||
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Traffic lights, which may also be known as stop lights, stoplight, traffic lamps, stop-and-go lights, robots or semaphore, are signaling devices positioned at road intersections, pedestrian crossings and other locations to control competing flows of traffic. Traffic lights have been installed in most cities around the world. They assign the right of way to road users by the use of lights in standard colors (Red - Amber - Green), using a universal color code (and a precise sequence, for those who are color blind). The most common traffic lights consist of a set of three lights: red, amber, and green. When illuminated, the red light indicates for vehicles facing the light to stop; the amber indicates caution, either because lights are about to turn green or because lights are about to turn red (depending on the region of the world you are in); and the green light to proceed, (if it is safe to do so). There are some variations in the use and legislation of traffic lights, depending on the customs of a country and the special needs of a particular intersection. There may, for example, be special lights for pedestrians, bicycles, buses, trams, etc. and there may be special rules or sets of lights for traffic turning in a particular direction. Complex intersections may use any combination of these. [wikipedia]
Traffic Light DO NOT USE FOR ANY COMMERCIAL PURPOSES, PLEASE USE
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| Last Updated on Thursday, 02 September 2010 14:46 |
pasti lagi sibuk ma domba2nya yah.??
Smangaaaaaaaaaaadddd...