Southern England| Kieli | Käännökset |
|---|---|
| bulgaria | а́втомагистра́ла, автострада (ávtostráda), автомагистрала (ávtomagistrála) |
| espanja | autopista, autovía |
| esperanto | aŭtovojo |
| hollanti | snelweg, autoweg, autosnelweg, autobaan |
| italia | autostrada, autostradale |
| japani | 公道 (kōdō) |
| kreikka | αυτοκινητόδρομος (aftokinitódromos), αυτοκινητόδρομος υπερταχείας κυκλοφορίας (aftokinitódromos ypertacheías kykloforías) |
| latina | autovia |
| latvia | automaģistrāle |
| liettua | automagistralė |
| norja | motorvei |
| portugali | autoestrada |
| puola | autostrada |
| ranska | autoroute, routière, autostrade, autoroutier |
| ruotsi | motorväg, autostrada |
| saksa | Autobahn |
| suomi | moottoritie |
| tanska | motorvej |
| turkki | otoyol |
| tšekki | dálnice |
| unkari | autópálya |
| venäjä | автомагистра́ль (avtomagistrál), автотра́сса (avtotrássa), автостра́да (avtostráda), автострада (avtostrada) |
| viro | maantee |
| Monikko | motorways |
(UK, Ireland, New Zealand, Queensland, New South Wales) A highway with grade-separated crossings (rather than level crossings) and designed (and only permitted) for high-speed motor-traffic (in Europe motor vehicles with a higher speed limit than 40 km/h) running in two directions on one separate carriageway each.
The cloverleaf interchange between US 131, M-6 and 68th Street in Cutlerville, Michigan, United States, shows many of the features of controlled-access highways: entry and exit ramps, median strips for opposing traffic, no at-grade intersections and no direct access to properties.
(UK, Ireland, New Zealand, Queensland, New South Wales) A highway with grade-separated crossings (rather than level crossings) and designed (and only permitted) for high-speed motor-traffic (in Europe motor vehicles with a higher speed limit than 40 km/h) running in two directions on one separate carriageway each.
This sign, or some variation thereof, is used to denote controlled-access highways in many countries.
(UK, Ireland, New Zealand, Queensland, New South Wales) A highway with grade-separated crossings (rather than level crossings) and designed (and only permitted) for high-speed motor-traffic (in Europe motor vehicles with a higher speed limit than 40 km/h) running in two directions on one separate carriageway each.
Typical overhead signage on Ontario's King's Highway network featuring an airport pictogram, distances to upcoming interchanges, and lane guidance. These signs have a blue background rather than the usual green to denote the local-express lanes.