Arterial means involving or relating to your arteries and the movement of blood through your body. people with arterial disease
Of or pertaining to a main channel (resembling an artery), as a river, canal, or railroad
An arterial road or railway is a main road or railway within a complex road or railway system
Streets that primarily serve through traffic and provide access to abutting properties as a secondary function Traffic signals or stop signs provide traffic control at intersections along arterials
Arterial means relating to the arteries, blood vessels carrying blood away from the heart All arteries except the pulmonary artery carry oxygenated blood
Signalized streets that serve primarily through-traffic and provide access to abutting properties as a secondary function, having signal spacings of two miles or less and turning movements at intersections that usually do not exceed 20 percent of total traffic
Of or pertaining to an artery, or the arteries; as, arterial action; the arterial system
Used to describe a major road which forms a route through or past settlements The M1, for example, is an arterial road through the East Midlands, serving Leicester, Derby, Nottingham and Loughborough See also bypass; radial
A highway serving primarily through traffic, and also providing access to abutting properties
an arterial is a major roadway in a city or urban area that collects traffic and feeds it to the freeway system Arterials are usually the roadways first plowed after a snowstorm to ensure adequate traffic flow
A highway used, or intended to be used for heavy traffic flow, usually a section line or mid-section line road, or one connecting neighborhoods or communities
of or involving or contained in the arteries; "arterial disease"; "the arterial system"; "arterial blood"
- A general term denoting a roadway primarily intended for through traffic, usually on a continuous route Direct access to abutting lane may be restricted or eliminated
Roads which carry traffic not carried by freeways to important traffic generators, such as airports or regional shopping centers
a road primarily for through traffic, usually on a continuous route Direct access to adjacent land is not a priority