[General] By the red curb

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B45

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I'm picking up take out from a restaurant and the server is taking very long to get my order ready. I reluctantly ask him to hurry up because I tell him this -

"Excuse sir, but I hate to ask you this, but could you please prepare my food a little quicker as I've been waiting for almost half an hour and my car is parked by a/the red curb (in the red zone, by the red line)

Do all three makes sense?
 
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B45

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Can someone please answer this question for me?

Kind Regards
 

Roman55

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I am not a teacher.

I suppose the red zone is one in which parking is either prohibited or allowed for a limited duration.

"In the red zone", sounds fine to me.

In England there are yellow lines and one would say, "I'm parked on a yellow line." So "on the red line" is probably better than "by the red line."
 
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B45

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I am not a teacher.

I suppose the red zone is one in which parking is either prohibited or allowed for a limited duration.

"In the red zone", sounds fine to me.

In England there are yellow lines and one would say, "I'm parked on a yellow line." So "on the red line" is probably better than "by the red line."

But the red is painted on the curb.
 

Barb_D

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Will it be ready soon? I'm illegally parked.
 

emsr2d2

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I would be more likely to say "I'm parked illegally" than Barb's word order, but that's probably a BrE vs AmE difference.
 
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