Scout wrote: ↑Mon Jul 25, 2022 9:59 pm
In the US it’s the inside lane, as in “in towards the center of the highway, inside all the other lanes”. This from the birds eye view of looking straight down onto the highway. I’m curious now, if it’s the outside lane in the UK, what is it outside of and what is the reference point ? I’ve seen this before on the forum and was confused until I just chalked it up to being a typo / mistake.
In the UK - and Thailand - we drive on the left. And the outside lane is the last of 2,3,4 lanes, counting from the left.
In a road with three lanes in each direction, the inside lane, the one you should be driving in when the road is clear ahead of you, is the nearest to the left. The middle lane is stating the bleeding obvious and the outside lane, is the furthest away from the inside lane. So here, its the furthest to the right. In the UK it's technically known as the overtaking lane, and when roads aren't heavy with traffic, that's what generally happens, you overtake and then move back over to the left.
For me personally, your terminology makes no sense, because of what I am used to. That applies to you in reverse. So just accept that elsewhere does things differently. Maybe in the UK we're lucky, as we have a whole continent within easy reach of our doorstep that does things differently. So from an early age, in my case day trips to Calais and Boulogne in France, got the senses, the smells, the language, the food, driving on the wrong side of the road (lol), working in overdrive very early. Schoolboy French taught me how to aske for 'deux bier, si'l vous plait' (and don't dare ask my age)!