General signs Signs are posted showing which direction the vehicles can move in: commonly an upward arrow, or on a
T junction where the main road is one-way, an arrow to the left or right. At the end of the street through which vehicles may not enter, a
prohibitory traffic sign "Do Not Enter", "Wrong Way", or "No Entry" sign is posted, e.g. with that text, or a round red sign with a white horizontal bar. Sometimes one portion of a street is one-way, another portion
two-way. An advantage of one-way streets is that drivers do not have to watch for vehicles coming in the opposite direction on this type of street. A number of European countries, including
Russia and
post-Soviet states, use one-way rectangular road signs with a white arrow on a blue background. In Russia and post-Soviet countries, such signs are called as "Exit to a one-way road" () and are placed in front of an intersection, often in combination with a
Yield sign or
Priority road sign. Rectangular one-way traffic signs in different countries of the world may have such inscriptions inside the arrow: • Austria uses ''''''; • Denmark uses ''''''; •
Germany uses ''''''; • Jordan uses ''''''; • Luxembourg uses ''''''; •
Romania and
Moldova use ''''''; • Some Spanish-speaking countries in the Americas use ''''''; • Thailand uses ''''''; • Turkey uses ''''''; In Russia and post-Soviet countries, the "End of one-way traffic" () sign is used to indicate the end of a one-way road. This sign shows a big white arrow crossed out by a red diagonal line on a blue background. Such sign in this form is not found anywhere else in Europe and Asia. , Russia.
No entry signs The abstract "No Entry" sign was officially adopted for standardization at the
League of Nations convention in Geneva in 1931. The sign was adapted from Swiss usage, derived from the practice of former European states that marked their boundaries with their formal shield symbols. Restrictions on entry were indicated by tying a blood-red ribbon horizontally around the shield. The sign is also known as
C1, from its definition in the
Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals. The European "No Entry" sign was adopted into North American uniform signage in the late 1960s / 1970s, replacing a previous white square sign bearing only the English text in black "Do Not Enter". In addition to the standardized graphic symbol, the US version still retains the wording "Do Not Enter", while the European and Canadian versions typically have no text. Since
Unicode 5.2, the
Miscellaneous Symbols block contains the character , representable in html as or .
Gallery File:SADC road sign R4.1.svg|One-way sign used in
South Africa,
Botswana,
Eswatini,
Namibia,
Lesotho, and
Tanzania File:HR road sign C05-2.svg|One-way sign used in
Croatia,
BiH,
Serbia,
Montenegro and
Slovenia File:Australia road sign R2-2-L.svg|The contemporary Australian one way sign is vertically oriented, but older signs similar to those used in North America are still common. File:5.5 Russian road sign.svg|One-way road sign used in
Russia and
post-Soviet states File:5.6 Russian road sign.svg|Sign used in Russia and post-Soviet states (except
Lithuania) to indicate end of one-way traffic File:Lithuania road sign 504.svg|Sign used in Lithuania to indicate end of one-way traffic File:Zeichen 267 - Verbot der Einfahrt, StVO 1970.svg|"No entry" signs are often placed at the exit ends of one-way streets File:Sweden road sign E16-1.svg|A Swedish one-way sign used on
T junctions File:Zeichen 220-20 - Einbahnstraße (rechtsweisend), StVO 1992.svg|Some countries, like
Germany, show text on one-way signs ( means "one-way street") File:Ontario Rb-21R.svg |
Canada File:Ecuador road sign R2-1D.svg|Sign "" used in Latin American countries (e.g.
Ecuador) File:MUTCD R6-1R.svg|One-way road sign used in US File:MUTCD R6-2R.svg|One-way road sign used in US (alt) File:MUTCD R5-1.svg|"No entry" signs are often placed at the exit ends of one-way streets (US) New Zealand RG-14 (L).svg|New Zealand and Fiji one way road sign NZ road sign R3-4.svg|New Zealand and Fiji no entry sign UK traffic sign 652.svg|UK one-way sign UK traffic sign 616.svg|UK no entry sign Brasil_R-3.svg|Brazil no entry sign ==Applications==