Traffic Cone

Traffic cones (also called road cones) are brightly-colored plastic cones used on roads for diverting traffic at construction sites or accidents. Cones are also frequently used in indoor public spaces to mark off areas which are closed to pedestrians, such as a restroom out of order; or to make note of a dangerous condition, such as a slippery floor. They can even be used on school playgrounds to delimit areas of a playing field. Traffic cones come in many different colors, with orange, yellow and red being the most common one due to their brightness. They may also have a reflective strip to further increase their visibility. Cones are easy to move or remove. Where sturdier (and larger) markers are needed, construction sites use traffic barrels, which may be weighted with sandbags. When a lane closure must also be a physical barrier against cars accidentally crossing it, Jersey barrier is preferred. In popular culture, stealing of traffic cones is seen as being popular with drunk students.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
oftc
ernest vandiver
hp 9000
daniel hunter mcmillan
craig unger
cheaters (movie)
file (metalwork)
23rd street (manhattan)
david h. gambrell
incipit
tooltip
liberalism in slovenia
beer hall
mean anomaly
carnaxide
assay office
colne
list of distributions based on debian
hubert dreyfus
radio source shgb02 plus 14a
turtle lake
liberalism and radicalism in switzerland
constituencies of namibia
amnon jackont
peter eriksson
uss benjamin franklin (ssbn 640)
uss kamehameha (ssbn 642)
uss george bancroft (ssbn 643)
uss george c. marshall (ssbn 654)
uss francis scott key (ssbn 657)
two rivers
republic of new africa
kenneth alexander keith, baron keith of castleacre
atlanta federal prison
steve sax
shaw communications
ezra levant
1996 world cup of hockey rosters
luther's large catechism
pan africanism
luther's small catechism
julia robinson
orff schulwerk
walter burgwyn jones