I believe they do, but they won't work for most business calls that have only auto recorded answering options. However, if you are calling someone or a business that is answered by a person, they should still work fine.
yes
No.
.... www.sprint.com www.verizion.com www.t-mobile.com www.att.com the phones that are there after you enter an American zip code are the ones that work in Us. :)
nope made in Korea
it's in the US it should work in all 50 states
This would depend on the phone. The UK and US use different systems for mobile phones but modern phones are designed to work under both systems.
Yes, rotary phones had area codes, beginning in the US and Canada in 1947. In fact, the pattern of area code assignments took into account the time it would take to dial that number on a rotary phone. For example, large cities like New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago had area codes 212, 213, and 312, respectively. If you add up the number of "clicks" on a rotary dial for those numbers, it's 5, 6, and 6. At the opposite extreme, South Dakota's area code 605 adds up to 21. (The 0 on a rotary dial is 10 clicks.) Places that had a lot of telephone traffic had numbers with lower total clicks.
Yeah Der!! Any Phone Can!
530
No. The networks used by T-Mobile and US Cellular are incompatible with each other.
yes, but it depends on what you mean by work. it will physically be able to work eg. call and text but im pretty sure the US sim cards will not work in UK's phones.
Yes, but you keep the same area code and number and everything.