Driving Theory
French Driving Theory Courses

Lesson 1 of the Passenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver Conduct unit

French D Category Theory: Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility

This lesson explores the vital interior signage requirements for passenger transport vehicles under French law. You will learn to recognize mandatory indicators for passenger safety, accessibility, and emergency procedures, which are essential for maintaining professional compliance and protecting your passengers. Mastering these visual cues is a fundamental step in Unit 2 of your D-category training.

passenger safetyaccessibilityD category licenseETG examprofessional transport
French D Category Theory: Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility

Lesson content overview

French D Category Theory

French Passenger Vehicle License: Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility

Operating a passenger transport vehicle in France—whether a minibus under Category D1 or a heavy-duty coach under Category D or DE—places a profound legal and moral responsibility on the driver. Beyond mastering vehicle dynamics and navigating complex urban infrastructure, a professional driver must ensure the vehicle's interior environment complies with strict French and European safety and accessibility standards.

This lesson provides a comprehensive guide to the standardized interior signage required in passenger-carrying vehicles. Understanding the placement, visibility, maintenance, and legal implications of these signs is essential for passing your French passenger vehicle theory exam (Examen théorique d'accès à la profession de conducteur de transport routier de personnes) and ensuring the daily safety of all passenger demographics, including persons with reduced mobility (PMR - Personnes à Mobilité Réduite).


In France, interior signage is not merely a design preference; it is heavily regulated by both domestic and European Union laws. The primary domestic authority is the French Transport Code (Code des Transports, specifically Articles R311-1 to R311-20), which dictates the exact technical specifications for public passenger transport vehicles.

Additionally, passenger vehicles must conform to European Union Directive 2010/31/EU and the NF EN ISO 7010 standard, which governs graphical hazard and safety symbols. These frameworks guarantee that safety and accessibility systems are consistent throughout Europe, ensuring that international passengers can navigate any French bus or coach without language barriers.


Core Principles of Effective Interior Signage

For safety signs to perform their life-saving functions, they must adhere to four core design and operational principles: visibility, standardization, auditory backup, and absolute priority.

1. Absolute Visibility and Legibility

A safety sign is useless if it cannot be seen or read. Signs must be strategically positioned at heights and angles that accommodate passengers of varying heights, including children and those seated in wheelchairs.

  • Contrast: Signage must feature high-contrast color schemes (such as white text or pictograms on dark blue, green, or red backgrounds) to remain legible under low-light or night driving conditions.
  • Driver Inspection: Prior to starting any shift, the driver must verify that no advertisements, temporary notices, or passenger luggage obscure any safety or accessibility signage.

2. Standardized Symbols and Color Coding

French and EU regulations mandate a highly specific, color-coded system for onboard symbols to facilitate instant recognition:

  • Blue Backgrounds: Reserved for mandatory actions and accessibility/priority designations (e.g., wheelchair spaces, priority seating).
  • Green Backgrounds: Reserved for safety equipment, evacuation paths, and emergency exits (Issues de secours).
  • Red Backgrounds: Reserved exclusively for fire-fighting equipment (e.g., fire extinguishers) and emergency engine shut-off controls.

3. Auditory and Tactile Complementarity

To ensure equal access for visually impaired passengers, critical safety information must not rely solely on visual cues.

  • Acoustic Beacons: Emergency exits in modern coaches are often equipped with sound beacons or flashing light-emitting diodes (LEDs) that activate during emergency evacuations.
  • Tactile Feedback: Buttons used to request stop signals or wheelchair ramp deployments must feature raised lettering, braille, or distinct tactile profiles.

4. Enforcement of Dedicated Spaces

Drivers must actively manage the passenger cabin to ensure that designated priority zones—such as spaces reserved for wheelchairs—remain unobstructed. Signage serves as the legal basis for the driver to request non-eligible passengers to vacate these areas.


Categorized Overview of Required Onboard Signage

Below is a detailed breakdown of the mandatory signage categories that must be present, fully functional, and verified before operating a passenger vehicle in France.

1. Accessibility Pictogram (The Handicap Symbol)

The international symbol of accessibility—a stylized white figure in a wheelchair on a blue background—designates spaces and services specifically tailored for disabled passengers.

Definition

Accessibility Pictogram (Pictogramme d'accessibilité)

An internationally recognized graphic symbol (conforming to NF EN ISO 7010) used to identify accessible boarding points, designated wheelchair zones, and accessible onboard facilities.

  • Interior Wheelchair Compartment: Any passenger vehicle equipped to carry wheelchair users must feature a dedicated, open bay marked with this symbol. The signage must explicitly indicate how the wheelchair should be positioned (typically rearward-facing against a padded backrest) and how the safety harness should be secured.
  • Accessible Toilet Facilities: If the vehicle features an onboard toilet, it must clearly display whether it is configured to accommodate passengers with reduced mobility.
  • Exterior Indicators: The symbol must also be displayed on the vehicle's exterior, adjacent to the door equipped with the boarding lift or ramp, so passengers can identify the correct entry point from the platform.

2. Emergency Exit Markers (Issues de Secours)

During an emergency—such as an onboard fire, collision, or rollover—passengers must be able to identify and operate evacuation routes within seconds.

  • Door and Window Markings: Every designated emergency exit door and escape window (baie de secours) must be clearly labeled. Windows designed for escape are typically accompanied by a small, securely mounted red hammer used to break the safety glass.
  • Instructional Decals: Signage must explain exactly how to operate the exit (e.g., "Pull lever, push window outward" / "Tirer la poignée, pousser la vitre").
  • Emergency Lighting: In compliance with safety standards, these signs must feature photoluminescent properties (glow-in-the-dark) or be connected to an independent battery backup system that ensures they remain illuminated even if the vehicle's main electrical system fails.

Warning

Safety Hammer Inspection: A common point of failure during pre-trip inspections is a missing or stolen glass-breaking hammer. Operating a passenger transport vehicle without the required safety hammers adjacent to escape windows is a severe safety violation and can lead to immediate vehicle grounding during roadside inspections.

3. Priority Seating (Sièges Prioritaires)

French public transport regulations require a specific percentage of forward-facing seats near the entrance doors to be reserved for passengers who require assistance but do not use a wheelchair.

  • Target Demographics: These seats are designated for the elderly, pregnant women, passengers traveling with young children, and individuals with sensory or physical disabilities.
  • Visual Elements: The seats are identified by high-contrast pictograms depicting a person with a cane, a pregnant silhouette, or an individual carrying an infant. They are frequently colored differently from standard passenger seats to stand out clearly.
  • Ramp Interaction: Often, these seats are adjacent to the fold-out wheelchair ramp controls, allowing the driver to monitor boarding and seating concurrently.

4. Fire Extinguisher Placement Signs

French law mandates that all passenger transport vehicles carry functional, certified fire extinguishers. The exact location of these extinguishers must be marked with highly visible signage.

  • Signage Specifications: A square or rectangular sign featuring a white fire extinguisher pictogram on a bold red background.
  • Location Rules: The sign must be mounted at eye level directly above or adjacent to the extinguisher housing. If the extinguisher is stored inside a closed protective cabinet, the cabinet door must carry the pictogram, and it must not be locked in a way that prevents rapid passenger or crew access during a fire.
  • Extinguisher Types: Drivers must be aware of the classification of the onboard extinguishers (typically ABC dry powder or CO2 for electrical compartments) as indicated on the accompanying safety labels.

5. General Safety and Passenger Conduct Signage (Consignes de Sécurité)

To maintain order and minimize hazards during transit, several general behavioral and safety signs must be permanently displayed throughout the vehicle interior.

  • No Smoking / No Vaping (Interdiction de fumer et de vapoter): Mandatory signs placed near entry doors and toilet compartments.
  • Do Not Lean Against Doors (Ne pas se pencher contre les portes): Essential on urban buses with automatic bi-parting or sliding doors to prevent passenger limbs from getting caught in the mechanisms.
  • Luggage Stowage Instructions: Signs in overhead racks or near luggage bays indicating maximum weight limits and instructions to secure loose items.
  • Emergency Engine/Power Cut-off: Clearly marked red switches near the driver's console and, in some articulated buses, near the center joints, allowing emergency services to shut down the high-voltage electrical system or fuel pump from inside or outside the cabin.

Step-by-Step Driver Protocol: Pre-Shift Signage Verification

As a professional driver, you are legally liable for the operational readiness of your vehicle's safety features. You must integrate a systematic inspection of all interior signage into your daily pre-shift walkaround (vérifications intérieures).

Pre-Shift Signage Inspection Routine

  1. Verify Entryway Signage: Confirm that exterior accessibility symbols and door-operation instructions are clean, intact, and readable from the curb.

  2. Inspect Emergency Exit Paths: Walk the center aisle and verify that every emergency exit sign (Issue de Secours) is unobstructed. Check that all safety glass-breaking hammers are present and securely seated in their designated brackets.

  3. Test Auxiliary Lighting: Activate the vehicle’s auxiliary and emergency lighting systems. Ensure that all illuminated exit signs light up immediately.

  4. Check Priority Seating Markers: Confirm that all priority seating pictograms are present, unvandalized, and that adjacent grab rails or fold-down armrests are mechanically secure.

  5. Assess Fire Safety Equipment: Verify that the fire extinguisher sign is clean and visible. Double-check that the extinguisher itself is fully charged (pressure gauge in the green zone), within its inspection date, and that its safety pin is secured.

  6. Confirm Auditory Warnings: Test the vehicle's stop-request and ramp-deployment warning systems to ensure that auditory beepers and visual dashboard indicator lights function in unison.


Common Violations, Edge Cases, and Their Consequences

Failure to maintain compliant interior signage can result in administrative fines, failed technical inspections (Contrôle Technique), and severe civil or criminal liability in the event of an accident.

Real-World Scenarios and Infractions

Infraction / ConditionReal-World ConsequenceCorrective Action
Obstructed Exit SignDuring an emergency evacuation, passengers cannot locate the rear exit due to stacked luggage. This can cause bottlenecks, smoke inhalation, or severe injury.Immediately relocate the obstructing items to the designated luggage bays before departing.
Inoperable Emergency IlluminationIn a nighttime collision where main engine power is lost, the cabin falls into total darkness, causing passenger panic and delayed escape.Do not operate the vehicle if the emergency battery backup for safety exit lighting fails. Report to maintenance.
Unmarked Priority SeatingAble-bodied passengers refuse to yield seats to an elderly passenger, leading to a fall during sudden braking.Ensure priority seating labels are clearly affixed. Politely but firmly request non-eligible passengers to vacate the seats when needed.
Missing Safety HammerIn a rollover accident where doors are jammed, passengers are trapped because they cannot break the reinforced escape windows.Replace missing hammers immediately from the depot stock before accepting passengers.
Auditory Signal FailureA visually impaired passenger misses their stop or attempts to alight while the wheelchair ramp is still deploying, resulting in a fall.Confirm that the auditory ramp warning system functions in tandem with the flashing external and internal warning lights.

Environmental and Loading Considerations

The effectiveness of passenger vehicle signage is highly dependent on environmental factors and the operational state of the vehicle.

Adverse Weather and Visibility

  • Condensation and Frost: During heavy rain or freezing temperatures, windows can fog up, obscuring emergency exit markers affixed to glass. Drivers must utilize the vehicle's climate control and demisting systems to keep passenger cabin windows clear.
  • Low Contrast Situations: In bright, direct sunlight, older, faded signs may become unreadable due to glare. Ensure all signs are made of high-quality, non-reflective, UV-resistant materials.

High-Passenger-Load Dynamics

  • Crowded Standee Areas: When operating an urban bus at maximum capacity, standing passengers can physically block visual signage. In these scenarios, the driver must rely on clear, audible announcements via the public address (PA) system to convey essential safety and stop information.
  • Luggage Overflow: On long-distance tourist coaches (DE/D1E), passengers frequently attempt to bring oversized bags into the seating area. Ensure that the aisle and emergency exit paths remain entirely clear of bags, as blocked paths render exit signs useless.

Summary of Concept Dependencies

To fully master the content of this lesson, you should connect these safety signage concepts with the surrounding lessons in your training curriculum:

  • Managing Passenger Behaviour (Lesson 2.2): How to use official signage to enforce rules, handle passenger disputes over priority seating, and manage emergency evacuation drills.
  • Procedures for Assisting Disabled Passengers (Lesson 2.4): Practical application of accessibility symbols, deploying wheelchair ramps safely, and securing wheelchair tie-downs.
  • Vehicle Inspection Protocols (Unit 5): Integrating the physical check of signage, safety hammers, and emergency lighting into your official pre-trip inspection checklist.


Learn more with these articles

Check out these practice sets


Search topics related to Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility

Explore search topics learners often look for when studying Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility. These topics reflect common questions about road rules, driving situations, safety guidance, and lesson level theory preparation for learners in France.

passenger vehicle interior signage regulations Francebus safety and accessibility signs theory examCode de la route signage for D category vehiclesemergency exit and priority seating signs requirementshow to pass French passenger vehicle theory exam signsmandatory vehicle markings for D and DE license

Related driving theory lessons for Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility

Browse additional driving theory lessons that cover connected traffic rules, road signs, and common driving situations related to this topic. Improve your understanding of how different rules interact across everyday traffic scenarios.

Procedures for Assisting Passengers with Reduced Mobility

Learn the essential legal and safety procedures for assisting passengers with reduced mobility in passenger transport vehicles. This guide covers safe boarding, correct use of accessibility equipment, and proper communication techniques required under French transport regulations for professional passenger vehicle drivers.

passenger safetyaccessibilityprofessional transportdriving theory
Procedures for Assisting Disabled Passengers lesson image

Procedures for Assisting Disabled Passengers

This lesson provides step-by-step instructions for utilizing vehicle accessibility systems, including wheelchair ramps, lifts, and specialized tie-down restraints. Drivers will study French regulatory frameworks mandating equal access to public transport services for all individuals. Crucially, the lesson covers respectful, safe, and efficient communication methods for guiding passengers with sensory, physical, or cognitive impairments.

French D Category TheoryPassenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver Conduct
View lesson
Handling Vehicle Breakdowns and Passenger Evacuation lesson image

Handling Vehicle Breakdowns and Passenger Evacuation

This lesson details the emergency protocols for handling mechanical breakdowns or tire blowouts on public highways and motorways. Drivers will learn how to park the vehicle in the safest possible location, activate hazard warning lights, and deploy the reflective warning triangle. It teaches precise commands and steps for evacuating passengers quickly through safety exits, positioning them behind protective guardrails.

French D Category TheoryEmergencies, Evacuation, Fatigue, Penalties and Safe Passenger Service
View lesson
Emergency Response Procedures in Passenger Transport lesson image

Emergency Response Procedures in Passenger Transport

This lesson covers immediate response steps for critical on-board events, including passenger medical emergencies and engine compartment fires. Learners will study the location and proper application of fire extinguishers, safety hammers, and first aid kits. It also explains how to coordinate effectively with French emergency services (SAMU, Fire Brigade) and reassure passengers to maintain calm during an incident.

French D Category TheoryEmergencies, Evacuation, Fatigue, Penalties and Safe Passenger Service
View lesson
Managing Passenger Behaviour During Transit lesson image

Managing Passenger Behaviour During Transit

This lesson focuses on techniques for monitoring and managing passenger behavior to maintain a calm and safe environment during transit. Drivers will learn how to enforce seatbelt rules, manage noise levels, and de-escalate verbal conflicts between passengers. Proactive safety announcements and a confident, polite professional demeanor are highlighted as key tools to prevent behavioral issues before they compromise road safety.

French D Category TheoryPassenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver Conduct
View lesson
Managing Passenger Flow During Boarding/Alighting lesson image

Managing Passenger Flow During Boarding/Alighting

This lesson examines the flow of passengers entering and exiting the vehicle and how to organize this movement to reduce stop delays safely. Drivers will study the operation of door safety interlocks, sensitive edges, and onboard monitoring cameras to prevent boarding accidents. It also covers coordinating priority boarding for elderly, pregnant, or injured passengers in a polite and structured manner.

French D Category TheoryBoarding, Alighting, Bus Stops and Urban Traffic
View lesson
Roles and Responsibilities of the Driver lesson image

Roles and Responsibilities of the Driver

This lesson outlines the core operational roles that drivers must perform, from ensuring safe passenger boarding to maintaining precise vehicle control throughout the journey. It details the active risk assessments required to identify hazards on the road and handle unexpected delays safely. Additionally, candidates will understand the specific procedures for reporting accidents and communicating effectively with both passengers and operations hubs.

French D Category TheoryPassenger Vehicle Licence Scope and Professional Responsibility
View lesson
Safe Following Distance with Passengers Onboard lesson image

Safe Following Distance with Passengers Onboard

This lesson emphasizes the critical importance of maintaining a safe following distance when carrying dozens of passengers. Learners will study how vehicle weight and passenger load dynamically extend braking and total stopping distances compared to standard passenger cars. The lesson provides concrete spacing rules, such as adjusted safety gaps for highway driving and increased distances on slippery roads.

French D Category TheoryVehicle Size, Smooth Control, Speed, Braking and Following Distance
View lesson
Interaction with Buses, Trams, and Public Transport lesson image

Interaction with Buses, Trams, and Public Transport

Public transit vehicles like city buses and streetcars (trams) have clear legal priorities and dedicated infrastructure in urban areas. This lesson teaches you to recognize reserved transit lanes and your legal obligation to yield to buses exiting their designated stops. You will also learn safe driving strategies near tram tracks, ensuring you never block public transit lines or risk passenger boarding areas.

French Category B TheoryPedestrians, Crossings, Cyclists and Vulnerable Road Users
View lesson
Restrictions for Passenger Vehicles in Urban Areas lesson image

Restrictions for Passenger Vehicles in Urban Areas

This lesson examines the regulatory limits and environmental controls applied to large passenger vehicles operating in dense French urban centers. Drivers will study the Crit'Air clean air sticker system and low-emission zones (ZFE) that restrict access for older, high-polluting vehicles. It also addresses navigating physical constraints, such as narrow streets, tight turning radii, and strict municipal weight limits.

French D Category TheorySigns, Bus Rules, Restrictions, Stops and Route Awareness
View lesson
Motorway Rules for Passenger Vehicles lesson image

Motorway Rules for Passenger Vehicles

This lesson covers the rules of driving passenger vehicles on high-speed French motorways (autoroutes). Learners will study entry-ramp merging protocols, lane restrictions for vehicles over 3.5 tonnes, and motorway-specific speed limits. The lesson also highlights the correct use of toll booths (péages), emergency hard-shoulder safety procedures, and accessing dedicated coach rest areas.

French D Category TheoryWeather, Motorways, Rural Routes, Terminals and Long-Distance Service
View lesson

Emergency Response and Passenger Evacuation Procedures

Understand the official protocols for handling onboard emergencies and conducting safe passenger evacuations. This theory lesson explains the critical steps for responding to vehicle breakdowns or accidents, managing passenger safety during evacuations, and using onboard emergency equipment in compliance with French transport standards.

emergency safetyevacuation proceduresprofessional transportdriving theory
Handling Vehicle Breakdowns and Passenger Evacuation lesson image

Handling Vehicle Breakdowns and Passenger Evacuation

This lesson details the emergency protocols for handling mechanical breakdowns or tire blowouts on public highways and motorways. Drivers will learn how to park the vehicle in the safest possible location, activate hazard warning lights, and deploy the reflective warning triangle. It teaches precise commands and steps for evacuating passengers quickly through safety exits, positioning them behind protective guardrails.

French D Category TheoryEmergencies, Evacuation, Fatigue, Penalties and Safe Passenger Service
View lesson
Emergency Response Procedures in Passenger Transport lesson image

Emergency Response Procedures in Passenger Transport

This lesson covers immediate response steps for critical on-board events, including passenger medical emergencies and engine compartment fires. Learners will study the location and proper application of fire extinguishers, safety hammers, and first aid kits. It also explains how to coordinate effectively with French emergency services (SAMU, Fire Brigade) and reassure passengers to maintain calm during an incident.

French D Category TheoryEmergencies, Evacuation, Fatigue, Penalties and Safe Passenger Service
View lesson
Managing Passenger Flow During Boarding/Alighting lesson image

Managing Passenger Flow During Boarding/Alighting

This lesson examines the flow of passengers entering and exiting the vehicle and how to organize this movement to reduce stop delays safely. Drivers will study the operation of door safety interlocks, sensitive edges, and onboard monitoring cameras to prevent boarding accidents. It also covers coordinating priority boarding for elderly, pregnant, or injured passengers in a polite and structured manner.

French D Category TheoryBoarding, Alighting, Bus Stops and Urban Traffic
View lesson
Managing Passenger Behaviour During Transit lesson image

Managing Passenger Behaviour During Transit

This lesson focuses on techniques for monitoring and managing passenger behavior to maintain a calm and safe environment during transit. Drivers will learn how to enforce seatbelt rules, manage noise levels, and de-escalate verbal conflicts between passengers. Proactive safety announcements and a confident, polite professional demeanor are highlighted as key tools to prevent behavioral issues before they compromise road safety.

French D Category TheoryPassenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver Conduct
View lesson
Roles and Responsibilities of the Driver lesson image

Roles and Responsibilities of the Driver

This lesson outlines the core operational roles that drivers must perform, from ensuring safe passenger boarding to maintaining precise vehicle control throughout the journey. It details the active risk assessments required to identify hazards on the road and handle unexpected delays safely. Additionally, candidates will understand the specific procedures for reporting accidents and communicating effectively with both passengers and operations hubs.

French D Category TheoryPassenger Vehicle Licence Scope and Professional Responsibility
View lesson
Safe Following Distance with Passengers Onboard lesson image

Safe Following Distance with Passengers Onboard

This lesson emphasizes the critical importance of maintaining a safe following distance when carrying dozens of passengers. Learners will study how vehicle weight and passenger load dynamically extend braking and total stopping distances compared to standard passenger cars. The lesson provides concrete spacing rules, such as adjusted safety gaps for highway driving and increased distances on slippery roads.

French D Category TheoryVehicle Size, Smooth Control, Speed, Braking and Following Distance
View lesson
Vehicle Dynamics and Smooth Acceleration/Deceleration lesson image

Vehicle Dynamics and Smooth Acceleration/Deceleration

This lesson focuses on passenger comfort and safety by teaching drivers how to control load transfers during acceleration and gear shifts. Smooth throttle control and progressive gear engagement reduce sudden cabin shifts, preventing standing passengers from falling. Candidates will also explore eco-driving techniques that reduce fuel consumption and wear on mechanical parts without compromising route timetables.

French D Category TheoryVehicle Size, Smooth Control, Speed, Braking and Following Distance
View lesson

Frequently asked questions about Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility

Find clear answers to common questions learners have about Signage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility. Learn how the lesson is structured, which driving theory objectives it supports, and how it fits into the overall learning path of units and curriculum progression in France. These explanations help you understand key concepts, lesson flow, and exam focused study goals.

Why is interior signage tested in the D and DE theory exam?

The exam tests this because a professional driver is legally responsible for passenger safety. You must ensure that passengers can navigate the vehicle, locate exits, and identify priority zones, which is a key part of the Code de la route requirements.

Are there different signage rules for urban buses versus long-distance coaches?

While both must display emergency and safety signs, the specific placement and accessibility icons are dictated by the vehicle's design and capacity. You must know how to identify standard safety markings that apply across all D-category public transport.

How do I identify a handicap-accessible seat on a bus in a theory question?

Look for specific blue or internationally recognized accessibility pictograms near designated seating areas. Questions often ask you to identify if a vehicle is properly marked for PRM (Persons with Reduced Mobility) access.

Do I need to memorize every single sign for the theory test?

You should focus on understanding the purpose of the signs and where they are required by law to be placed. The exam tests your ability to recognize if a vehicle is compliant with professional safety standards, rather than just memorizing labels.

Start Your Targeted French Driving Theory Practice Search Now

Ready to focus your study? Use the practice search to find exactly the French driving theory questions you need for the Code de la route and permis de conduire ETG. Refine your knowledge on specific topics or challenging rules to boost your confidence and exam readiness.

Search Practice Questions

Continue your French driving theory learning journey

French road signsFrench article topicsFrench HGV Theory courseSearch French road signsFrench driving theory homeFrench road sign categoriesFrench driving theory topicsSearch French theory articlesFrench driving theory coursesFrench driving theory articlesFrench driving theory practiceFrench practice set categoriesFrench Motorcycle Theory courseFrench Category B Theory courseFrench D Category Theory courseCategory AM French Theory courseFrench driving licence proceduresSearch French driving theory practiceFrench driving theory terminology A–ZFrench driving theory terms and glossarySpeed Limits and Road Networks unit in French Category B TheoryFrench Road Signs and Traffic Signals unit in French Category B TheoryFrench Traffic Laws and Priority Rules unit in French Category B TheoryHelmet, Visibility and Protective Behaviour unit in Category AM French TheoryMotorcycle Licence Basics and Rider Responsibility unit in French Motorcycle TheoryAM Licence Basics and Small Vehicle Responsibility unit in Category AM French TheoryCategory B Licence Basics and Driver Responsibility unit in French Category B TheoryGoods Vehicle Licence Scope and Professional Responsibility unit in French HGV TheoryProtective Equipment, Visibility and Rider Condition unit in French Motorcycle TheoryPassenger Vehicle Licence Scope and Professional Responsibility unit in French D Category TheoryManaging Luggage and Stowage lesson in Passenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver ConductManaging Passenger Behaviour During Transit lesson in Passenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver ConductErgonomics for Driver and Passenger Comfort lesson in Passenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver ConductProcedures for Assisting Disabled Passengers lesson in Passenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver ConductSignage for Passenger Safety and Accessibility lesson in Passenger Safety, Comfort, Accessibility and Driver Conduct