welehh tak kiro wis ono jawabane...
There's no reason why not ! Mobile numbers are 'non-geographic' - meaning they're not tied to a particular town or county.
i want to know about a particular mobile number
Country code +60 is Malaysia, but a number beginning with +60 4 is a geographic number (i.e., a landline), not a mobile.
The IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) number is specific to the handset. The mobile number is associated with the SIM card. If you swap a different SIM card into the mobile phone, it will have a different mobile number but the same IMEI number. The mobile company will have a record of the IMEI of the handset that used a particular mobile number for a particular call, and your mobile provider has a record of the IMEI of any phone you purchased from them, but you cannot in general trace the IMEI by the mobile number.
To find out the physical location of a particular mobile phone:Get a valid court order from a judge.Call the mobile provider.=or= Call the mobile and ask its owner.To find out where a mobile number is based, you need to parse its telephone number. In most countries, mobile numbers are segregated into special area codes that serve the entire country. For those countries, the country code (the first 1, 2, or 3 digits of the international number, excluding any prefixes like 00, 011, 010, or 0011) will give you all the information you can get.In other countries, like North America (country code +1 = USA, Canada, etc.), Brazil (country code +55), and Mexico (country code +52, with all mobiles prefixed +52 1), mobile numbers use the same geographic area codes as landline numbers. In those cases, the area code will pin down the home location of the mobile more precisely.In India, there is a bit of a hybrid system. Mobile codes are grouped into 22 geographic zones, but neither the zones nor the code numbers correspond directly with the geographic area codes for landlines.
+44 is the country code for the U.K. This particular number is a mobile phone.
Ask the person or ask that person to lend you his or her phone and beep your number.
All UK mobile numbers are 'non-geographic' - meaning they're not tied to a specific area or town. For example - the dialling code 01132 represents numbers in the geographic area of Leeds in Yorkshire. Mobile numbers used to be classified by carrier - for example, numbers starting 079 would be an Orange mobile. However - since it's very easy to switch your number to another carrier, the old carrier grouping is no longer relevant.
The number 69 is related to sex because the shape of the number is the shape of that particular sex position.
size, which refers to the number of individuals in a particular group within a given area.
That is a UK mobile (cell) phone number - it doesn't relate to any particular place.
That number belongs to a mobile (cell) phone - not a specific area. 44 is the country code for the UK. The next digit (7) indicates it is a non-geographic number.