Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Mandatory signs are always round blue signs with white border.
Mandatory signs are generally circular with a white border and symbol on a blue background.
Mandatory signs are used to set the obligations of all traffic which use a specific area of road.
Chile also currently uses a mixture of both types of mandatory signs.
Although most lawsuits are settled before trial, suing or threatening to sue is viewed as a mandatory sign of resolve.
Mandatory signs are all circular like the restrictive signs, but feature white symbols on a blue background.
Mandatory signs are similar to European signs.
Mandatory signs generally follow European conventions (circular with red border/blue circle) with some local variations.
These are Warning signs, Mandatory signs and Information signs.
Unlike prohibitory or restrictive signs, mandatory signs tell traffic what it must do, rather than must not do.
In Vienna signatories, the mandatory sign is either a light blue circle with a white border or a white circle with a red border.
The regulatory, prohibitory and mandatory signs are all of them white circular with red borders, with the exception of the stop and the yield sign.
A bacterial ooze is excreted from the plant organs and this is a mandatory sign that BXW may be present.
When a specific area of roadway is designated with a mandatory sign specifying a vehicle type, all traffic of this type must use this area if possible.
Regulatory signs either give positive instructions, i.e. Mandatory signs, or indicate a prohibition, i.e. Prohibitionary signs.
The mandatory sign group is not used in the United States and Canada, who are not signatories to the Vienna Convention; both countries consider them kinds of regulatory signs.
Different colours are use within these shapes; blue circles are mandatory signs, it give positive instructions, while red circles are prohibitory signs, it give negative instructions.
The given procedure and its results are used by the state registration of object in the special registry and by the mandatory signing of insurance contracts for EIO.
Mandatory signs can also be used to issue instructions to all vehicles - common examples include "pass on this side" signs seen at roadworks, and "compulsory roundabout" signs seen at mini-roundabouts.
For example, 64-bit editions of Microsoft Windows now implement mandatory signing of all kernel-level drivers in order to make it more difficult for untrusted code to execute with the highest privileges in a system.
A red line through a mandatory sign indicates not that a vehicle of a specific type is prohibited from entering the designated area, but that the area is now deregulated and any vehicle may use it.
With the exception of the special designs used for Stop, Yield, and No Entry signs, mandatory signs (e.g. Must Turn Left) are round with a white background, red border, and a black pictogram.
For the same-day service on a new passport, the traveler must make one of the three trips to the Passport Agency for the mandatory signing of documents; the service provides someone to make the appointment for signing, and to pick up the passport.
Minimum speed limits can also be defined using mandatory road signs, although such signs are rare in most countries; the U.S., which does not use mandatory signs, instead places minimum speed limits on the same type of panel as maximum speed limits.
Mandatory road signs can be used to allocate certain areas to specific vehicles - the Vienna Convention explicitly mentions footpaths, cyclepaths and bridleways, but tramways, bus lanes, taxi lanes, HOV lanes and snow mobile tracks can also be designated with mandatory signs.