Monty Dog said:'A droit' would mean a rider coming through on your righthand side so stay left and 'a gauche' - on your left, which would be the normal side for overtaking in Europe.
Jonathan M;42262][quote name= said:'A droit' would mean a rider coming through on your righthand side so stay left and 'a gauche' - on your left, which would be the normal side for overtaking in Europe.
Chuffy said:I think you'll find that a droit is actually a small terracotta gnome. Produced in the caves of the Gironde region of France droits are kept on a special shelf to ward off pantry lice. They enjoyed a recent surge in popularity when Paris Hilton replaced her chihuaha with a Swarovski encrusted droit for a visit to France, Europe. It's all true, Wikipedia told me so.
On the profile of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the tool indicates that a worker on the CIA network reportedly added the exclamation "Wahhhhhh!" before a section on the leader's plans for his presidency.
A warning on the profile of the anonymous editor reads: "You have recently vandalised a Wikipedia article, and you are now being asked to stop this type of behaviour."
Was that in 2007 when the OP was started and the previous last post was made?I disagree. I have lived in France for three years and I would understand it to mean "On your right". But I do agree that a French cyclist wouldn't pass you on your right, so what do I know?
Perhaps things have changed since the OP raised the issue twelve years ago?I disagree. I have lived in France for three years and I would understand it to mean "On your right". But I do agree that a French cyclist wouldn't pass you on your right, so what do I know?
Did you order by oldest first?Well that's weird. I answered that post by asterix thinking it was new today and not dating from 2007. How did it suddenly pop up in General Cycling Discussions?