Yes, it will all depend of the country.
I had a boyfriend that lived in Venezuela, I'm from Puerto Rico, and to call him I had to dial 011 to make the international call, the area code of Venezuela that was 52, and the 10 regular digits of the phone number.
That's because countries like Venezuela have states and those states have provinces.
Let me explain:
International call code: 011
Venezuela code: 52
Maracaibo, Zulia (Province): ---
Personal number: ------
Hope you understand.
Thank a lot for your reply...it really helped me.
Actually, no In some countries, there are 8 digits in a phone number, such like Australia. In others, there could be 4. Such as the country of Niue!
Country code +218 is Libya, but that's not enough digits for the rest of the number.
Assuming this is an international phone number, the first two digits (49) indicate the country of Germany.
Most people can remember strings of 4-5 digits. Longer strings are harder.
+46 <7 to 13 digits> belongs to Sweden.
Phone numbers are seven digits long in some countries but differing lengths in others. It purely depends upon what number of phone numbers the country needs .
I guess that you talking about the phone number prefix. its ussually the first 3 digits of the phone number for exampls: If you have a phone number in NJ the first 3 digits would be (609) If you live in a different country, theres always a 3 number digit you would dial in the beginning of a phone number Hope that will help...
The number of digits in a phone number depends on the county of the number itself. For instance, in the United States, there are typically 10 digits for a number, whether it has an area code or is toll free.
That's not a valid phone number. Country code +1 is North America (US, Canada, etc.), but there is no area code 444 and also you don't have enough digits.
Actually, it doesn't. At least, it is not 10 digits all over the world. For example, in Bolivia, the mobile phone number has only 8 digits. The number of digits required (for any particular country) can depend on the following:The number of mobile phones (or similar devices) used. If in some country you have, say, 5 million mobile devices, you need at least seven digits.Mobile numbers may have to start with certain digits. This may require an additional digit. In the above example, if in a country all mobile phone numbers start with 6, 7 or 8, then 7 digits are no longer enough - the minimum requirement is 8 digits.The numbers may be organized so that the first few digits identify the phone company, or the geographical region. This also tends to increase the number of digits, since some areas will have few numbers, while others will have many.
919898803296
It varies from country to country, and sometimes within individual countries. For example, the Falkland Islands is never more than 8 digits including country code, for example +500 12345, while the UK would typically be 12 such as in +44 117 4960123. The minimum length for an international telephone number is 7 digits, and the maximum is 15 digits.