With the stick pointing directly upwards.
Do you mean shift gears because that's a stick shift, otherwise im not sure this is right but neutral is when the car is at the mercy of the environment sround it because the wheels are not locked like they are in park but the car can't drive
Yes that is correct
If the trans is locked in one gear, and the stick refuses to move, it has very likely jumped out of the shift selector rods. You will likely have to remove the shift stick cross pin, to pull the stick out, and manually with a long flat screw driver, shift all rods to the neutral position. There are cut aways in the rods. The neutral position should be when they are all in the same general location so the stick can move between them. Test this by bumping the starter, before replacing the stick.
The normal process for putting a manual car in neutral is to first completely depress the clutch. After the clutch is fully depressed then it is safe to shift the gear stick into neutral.
If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.
It should be the stick closest to you is up for out and down for in, the passenger side stick is up for low range middle for neutral and down for hi range.
For an automatic:Turn the ignition until the dash lights come on, press the break, shift into what ever gear you want. In most newer cars the break has to be depressed to shift from park.For a manual:Press the clutch and move the stick into neutral
stick shift or automatic
When the car is turned off, it is best functional to be parked if it stays in parked..however, i do believe it is possible to shift it into another gear by putting the key in a slot that's beside the stick-shift (however this may not be in all accords.) If you do this, i highly recommend u don't leave the car parked in neutral..this can cause the car to roll forwards/backwards since neutral means the car isn't in gear.
They are stick shift.
Bent shift tube or shift fork.