Not directly. The only way would be to call another land-line - then have them forward the call to the number you're trying to reach. You will be charged for the call to the first land-line number - and the party forwarding the call will bear the charge to the destination number.
With a mobile originated call firstly it sends out a connection request then there is a security check, then the resources are checked i.e. money etc, then the call is set up.
From a landline, up to 10p/min. From a mobile, up to 40p/min. Before 2005, the price from landlines was linked to the price of a national rate geographic call. Since 2005 most people call 01 and 02 numbers from landlines for up to one hour per call using "inclusive" minutes. The link to "national rate" has therefore been lost. Since 2009, some landline providers allow 0870 numbers within inclusive minutes.
To forward telephone calls from a landline to a cell phone line, follow these general steps, which may vary depending on your service provider: Dial the activation code provided by your landline service provider (such as *72) on your landline phone. Enter the phone number of the cell phone where you want calls forwarded. Wait for a confirmation tone or message indicating that call forwarding has been set up. Test the call forwarding by making a call to your landline; it should be forwarded to your cell phone. Note: To deactivate call forwarding, dial the deactivation code provided by your landline service provider (such as *73) on your landline phone.
If you receive a call detail with your cellular phone bill, it will include toll-free numbers, because, although they do not incur any long distance charges, they do still use airtime minutes.
0845 numbers are charged at rates up to 5p/minute from a BT landline, up to 42p/minute from a mobile phone. 0870 numbers are charged at rates up to 8p/minute from a BT landline, up to 42p/minute from a mobile. Most "inclusive" plans do not include calls to either 0845 or 0870 numbers, but do include calls to 01, 02, and 03 numbers.
If you are calling a toll-free number from a landline in Puerto Rico, it will not show up on your bill, because there is no charge. If you are calling from a mobile phone (cell phone), the call may show up on your bill, because you are still using airtime minutes, even though there is no charge for the long distance.
That depends on where you are in Canada, and whether you have a Telus landline or a Telus cellphone. From a landline in Canada, if you can dial the number with just 7 or 10 digits, then it is a local call. If you get a recording telling you to hang up and redial with 1+area code, then it is a toll call.
Anything up to £1.50/minute or £1.50 flat-fee per call from a BT landline. Usually a lot more from a mobile phone company. If you're not dialling from a BT phone, you will need to check the price list of the telephone company you are using.
I am looking for landline phone are there any available? how do I sign up for a landline service with the government?
This can be done from a cell phone exactly the same as you can from a landline. Simply dial *67 then dial the number. This will show up on their caller ID as a blocked call.
You can install Caller id for your phone. or you can call you mobile phone service provider and ask who called you...they might be able to point you out for automatic interactive service If you need to look up a cell phone number you'll have to access a proprietary database. If you are looking for a landline phone, google it.
Advantage: Eliminates mobile phone ring. Disadvantage: Hassle of setting it up.