142. After entering the acceleration lane of an expressway, the driver should increase the speed to more than _________ per hour.
A. 50
B. 60
C. 30
D. 40
Answer:B
Previous question: 141. When a vehicle approaches a bus stopping at a bus stop, the driver should ______ in case the bus starts up suddenly or pedestrians cross in front of the bus.
2026年科目一英文版题库共973题,你可以免费查看前200题,完整版题库请添加微信购买:

The English version of the 2026 subject 1 question bank has a total of 973 questions. You can view the top 200 questions for free. Please add WeChat to purchase the complete version of the question bank.
Subject 1 test questions
- Which is correct when learning driving on road?
- Before entering a level crossing, the vehicle should reduce speed and change to a lower gear, and _____ after entering the level crossing.
- What is the max speed on muddy road?
- If a vehicle has the right of way at an intersection but encounters a vehicle cutting in, the driver should _________.
- When driving on a mountain road covered by ice and snow, the vehicle behind should ______ if the vehicle in front is climbing a slope.
- Must reduce the frequency of honking in this section.
- When seeing a watch for children sign while driving, the driver should _______.
- A motorized vehicle is not allowed to make a U turn at the level crossing, bridge, steep slope, tunnel or dangerous road section.
- What kind of behavior of this driver violates the law?
- Driving a motorized vehicle on the road should be required to be with a license plate.
- When a vehicle passes a level crossing, it is prohibited from overtaking.
- When encountering children on the road, the driver should _________.
- When a vehicle running at night encounters a curve ahead, its lighting ____.
- The main impact of mountain roads on safe driving is _______.
- Driving a small passenger vehicle on the expressway, the minimum speed should not be less than 90 kilometers per hour.
- Driving in a dusty weather, it does not needed to turn on the head light, the contour light and the tail light.
