Yes
It is the total number of landline telephone user per 100 individuals with in a certain area.
Not possible.
In general, you dial a fax number on a fax machine exactly the same way you would dial the same telephone number on an ordinary landline telephone at the same location.
You can't dial a semicolon on a landline phone, nor on a mobile phone, for that matter. It's probably a good thing, then, that you never need to dial a semicolon on any kind of telephone, since a semicolon cannot be part of a telephone number.
Either home or mobile telephone. On a form to be filled in, if you give your home landline number, some places ask for a second (alternative) number as well e.g. mobile number. If one gets no answer, the place has an alternative number to try.
call customer care and ask details. normally their is no option to find with full details.it just show landline type with location without address.
You dial a fax number on a fax machine exactly the same way you would dial the same telephone number on an ordinary landline telephone at the same location. If you dial just 7 digits for a local number on your landline phone, then you dial just 7 digits for a local fax number on your fax machine.
The same as calling a standard landline telephone. Just key in the number you'll be calling.
To put a UK telephone number in international format, you must replace the trunk prefix 0 at the beginning of the UK domestic number with the telephone country code +44. On a mobile phone, just dial the number in international format, beginning with +44 (including the plus symbol). On a landline phone or fax machine, substitute India's international access prefix 00 for the plus symbol. These instructions are for dialing any UK number, landline or mobile.
Fax machines use the same telephone lines as voice calls. If you unplug your regular landline telephone and plug a fax machine into the same jack, your voice number is suddenly a fax number. When sending a fax, you dial the fax number exactly the same way you would dial it on a regular telephone. Of course, if you live in an overlay area (two or more area codes for the same geographic zone), it is possible that your voice number and fax number will be in different area codes, just as it is possible to have two voice numbers in different area codes. For example, in Dallas you might have a 214 voice number and a 469 fax number.
Australian 1800 and 1300 toll-free numbers are not intended for use from outside Australia. You may be able to get through by simply prefixing the Australian number with telephone country code +61 (or 00 61 as dialed from a landline phone in Singapore), but you will pay international toll rates for the call if it goes through. If the call fails, your best option is to look on the Internet for a regular geographic number for the company you are trying to contact.
If you are calling to a landline phone, it may be possible for the telephone operator to check the line for faults, or to interrupt a call in progress and ask the party to accept your call. However, there may be a substantial charge for these operator services, and they may not work on all telephone companies.