yes if you get international calling or buy a calling card.
That is a UK mobile (cell) phone number - it doesn't relate to any particular place.
In the US, cell phones are given numbers with standard area codes so there is no way to know if it is a land line or cell phone. Telephone operators do not make different charges because callers are unaware of the type of telephone they are calling. The additional costs of connecting to a cell phone are therefore paid by the cell phone subscriber rather than the caller. In the UK, cell phones have their own area codes, always starting with 07. Callers are able to identify the number as a cell phone. Telephone operators are therefore able to charge the caller rather than the cell phone subscriber. Both charging methods have their own benefits. In the UK, cell phone users cannot be charged for unwanted calls or for texts so costs for using a cell phone are easier to control. In the US, cell phones can be called without paying big premiums. A UK call from land line to cell phone can frequently cost 30p per minute or more (45c per minute).
Yes. 44 is the international dialling code for the UK. The next digit, 7, indicates it's probably a mobile (cell) 'phone. Other uses of a 7 in that digit position would be for services which allow the owner of the number to have one publically known 'phone number and to divert their calls to any other 'phone number that they want to receive the incoming calls on.
No-where - UK numbers starting with 07 are mobile (cell) phone numbers.
No
5 years ago i got my first cell phone or mobile phone as we call them in the UK in 1997.
No - usually the mobile networks will do all the 'hard work' for you.
This is a UK mobile (cell phone) number.
No, I think you would be charged because you're calling her. If she called you then she would be charged... I think! Hope this helped!
This is the start of a UK mobile (cell) phone number.
Nowhere. Any UK number starting with 7 will be a mobile (cell) phone number.
In the UK 0500 is a toll free number.