Yes, international rates are usually substantially higher than domestic rates. Partly this is due to the fact that other countries can charge whatever the heck they want for interconnections, and a few countries opt to use this as a source of revenue... they gouge the phone company, who in turn gouges you. (Of course, part of it is legit: paying for satellite time, undersea cables, or whatever can get pricey.)
That depends entirely on (a) which country you're in and (b) what your network charges you for the call ! The easiest way to answer this question would be for you to phone your service provider and ask them !
nope
There is a first phone number for ever country
Yes. I'm afraid you do. The signal still sends and even if their phone is turned off,, the phone collects the data and is on their phone, even if it is switched off!
No. As long as you are texting within the same country, the price will be the same.
No noob
There are several different radio stations that call themselves "K-Country."
You could call it from a different phone. Or you could have your carrier locate the SIM card.
Hell yes, but its illegal
That number belongs to someone in Ghana - specifically a mobile number.
A Dual SIM cell phone allows you to have two phone accounts on the same phone. For instance, having a work phone account and personal phone account on the same line. Another use would be for someone who travels and different plans are better in different countries.
You should either... 1.Keep in touch by email or phone. 2.Go to the country to be with that guy longer:P
This is not just cell phone numbers; it might affect any phone number. Different countries use different country prefixes for the phone system; the length of this prefix varies. For example, "1" for the United States, and "591" for Bolivia.After the country prefix there might be a region prefix, and then the actual phone number within each region. The length of each of these parts may also vary. For instance, in a small country (which doesn't have many phone connections) 8 digits might be enough, for region + actual phone number; in a country with many phone lines, more digits might be required.
I am sorry that you were an extra and lost G Hannelius' phone number, but her number is not public information.