Arizona Motorcycle practice
Signals & Pavement Markings
How to read traffic signals, lane lines, and pavement markings — including yellow and white lines, arrows, and flashing lights.
Questions reviewed against the official Arizona driver handbook · July 7, 2026
14 questions · pass with 11 correct. You get instant feedback and an explanation after every answer.
Study questions with answers
12 sample Signals & Pavement Markings questions with the correct answer, a short explanation, and the official handbook reference. Read through them, then take the quiz above.
1. Turn signals matter even more on a motorcycle than on a car because:
Correct answer: A rider is more vulnerable and needs to be seen
A rider's added vulnerability makes clearly signaling intentions, and being noticed, even more important.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Signals)
2. You should use your turn signals:
Correct answer: Any time you plan to change lanes or turn
Use your signals whenever you plan to change lanes or turn, even when you believe no one else is around.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Signals)
3. Because motorcycles have blind spots, before changing lanes you should:
Correct answer: Turn your head to check the side
Mirrors alone are not enough; turn your head to check the side for vehicles before you change lanes.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Head Checks)
4. To warn drivers behind you that you are about to slow, you can:
Correct answer: Flash your brake light
Flashing the brake light before slowing helps others notice you, especially where they might not expect you to slow.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Brake Light)
5. At night and in fog, you should use your:
Correct answer: Low beam
Use the low beam at night and in fog to cut glare and improve how well you can see the road.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Headlight)
6. Flashing your brake light matters most just before you:
Correct answer: Slow more suddenly than others expect
Flash the brake light before slowing more suddenly than others expect, or where a driver may not anticipate it.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Brake Light)
7. Compared with a car's horn, a motorcycle's horn is:
Correct answer: Not as loud, so you should not rely on it alone
A motorcycle horn is not as loud as a car's, so use it but do not depend on it by itself.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Horn)
8. The rounded (convex) mirrors found on most motorcycles:
Correct answer: Make cars look farther away than they really are
Convex mirrors give a wider view of the road behind but make following cars appear farther away than they really are.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Using Your Mirrors)
9. A quick tap on the horn is a smart idea:
Correct answer: Before passing someone who might move into your lane
A brief horn tap before passing anyone who could drift into your lane helps get their attention.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Horn)
10. You should clean and adjust your mirrors:
Correct answer: Before you start riding
Adjust the mirrors before you start out, since doing it one-handed while riding is difficult and unsafe.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Preparing to Ride (T-CLOCS)
11. After you complete a turn, you should:
Correct answer: Make sure your turn signal is off
Cancel the signal after turning; otherwise a driver may think you plan to turn again and pull into your path.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Signals)
12. Signaling before you enter a freeway is helpful because:
Correct answer: Drivers behind are more likely to see it and make room
A blinking signal makes drivers approaching from behind more likely to notice you and open room as you merge.
Source: Arizona Motorcycle Operator Manual - Increasing Conspicuity (Signals)
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Every Arizona question is written from the official Arizona driver handbook and checked against its current edition. DMV Test Free is a free, independent study resource — not affiliated with any DMV or government agency. About DMV Test Free