Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals
0 sources
Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals
Summary
Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals is an United Nations treaty[1]. It draws 392 Wikipedia views per month (united_nations_treaty category, ranking #6 of 45).[2]
Key Facts
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's image is recorded as The endpaper of the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals.jpg[3].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's instance of is recorded as United Nations treaty[4].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's locator map image is recorded as Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals.svg[5].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's location is recorded as Vienna[6].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's Commons category is recorded as Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals[7].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's language of work or name is recorded as English[8].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's language of work or name is recorded as Spanish[9].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's language of work or name is recorded as Chinese[10].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's language of work or name is recorded as Russian[11].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's language of work or name is recorded as French[12].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as traffic warning sign[13].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as priority signs[14].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as prohibitory traffic sign[15].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as mandatory sign[16].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as Special regulation sign[17].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as Information, facilities, or service signs[18].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as directional road sign[19].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's has part is recorded as Q4166526[20].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's point in time is recorded as +1968-11-08T00:00:00Z[21].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0dq4dk[22].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's work available at URL is recorded as https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/Volume%201091/volume-1091-I-16743-English.pdf[23].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's document file on Wikimedia Commons is recorded as Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals.pdf[24].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's signatory is recorded as Austria[25].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's signatory is recorded as Belarus[26].
- Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals's signatory is recorded as Belgium[27].
Why It Matters
Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals draws 392 Wikipedia views per month (united_nations_treaty category, ranking #6 of 45).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]