The Country Code for the United States is 1. Dial the appropriate International Access Code (011 in some countries) + 1 + Area Code + Local Number. Direct dialing may not be available from all locations, so you may need to place the call through an operator.
On a mobile phone, just dial +1 (including the plus symbol) and then the 10-digit US number. On a landline phone, just dial 00 1 and then the 10-digit US number.
Dial 00 (the international access prefix for calls originating in the UK; some countries use other prefixes), then the country code +1 (for North America = USA, Canada, etc.), then the area code (3 digits) and subscriber number (7 digits).
The telephone country code for the United Kingdom is +44, and you must drop the trunk prefix 0 from the UK domestic telephone number. For example, Edinburgh's area code 0131 becomes +44 131, and London's area code 020 becomes +44 20.
On a mobile phone (cell phone), just dial the number in international format, beginning with +44 (including the plus symbol).
On a landline, on a fax machine, or on a cell phone that does not allow you to enter a plus symbol in a telephone number, replace the plus symbol with the US/North American international access prefix 011.
The UK uses country code +44.
To call the UK from the USA, you dial 011 44 then the full UK number minus its leading zero.
For example, 020 7222 1234 is dialled as 011 44 20 7222 1234.
The meaning of your question is unclear.
If you are trying to call someone who is traveling in the UK with a US mobile phone (cellphone), you dial the US number the same way you do when the mobile phone is physically in the US. The network will automatically find them, and they will pay any international roaming charges, according to their calling plan.
If you are in the UK, trying to call someone in the US (or a US-based cellphone), the country code for the US is +1.
If you are trying to call from the US to the UK, the country code for the UK is +44, and you must drop the leading 0 from the UK domestic number.
(The plus sign means "insert your international access prefix here." From a GSM mobile phone, you can enter the number in full international format, starting with the plus sign. The most common prefix is 00, but North America (USA, Canada, etc.) uses 011, Japan uses 010, Australia uses 0011, and many other countries use different prefixes.)
The telephone country code for the UK is +44, and you also must drop the trunk prefix 0 from the beginning of the UK domestic telephone number. For example, area code 020 for London becomes +44 20.
From a mobile phone (cellphone), just dial the number in full international format; e.g., +44 20 7946 0123. Be sure to include the plus symbol.
From a landline phone, or a cellphone that doesn't allow you to enter the plus symbol, substitute 011 for the plus symbol.
(The plus sign means "insert your international access prefix here." From a GSM mobile phone, you can enter the number in full international format, starting with the plus sign. The most common prefix is 00, but North America (USA, Canada, etc.) uses 011, Japan uses 010, Australia uses 0011, and many other countries use different prefixes.)
use a program called skype. skype to skype calls are free. all you need is a mic
dial 001+local numbers in US or +1 and the local numbers in US
Dial 0044 and then the regular number, but leaving out the first zero in it.
Dial the International Access Code (011 from the US; something else from most other countries). Dial the UK Country Code (44). Dial the UK Area Code (WITHOUT the initial zero) Dial the UK Local Number.
If you are calling the person (you dial) then you will pay. If they call you then they will pay.
In your question, it looks like you didn't dial all the digits. A UK mobile phone number, as dialed from a US or Canadian landline phone, is of the form 011-44-7AXX-XXXXXX-#, where A=4,5,7,8,9 and X is any digit. Pressing the # key at the end tells the telephone switch not to wait for any more digits. More generally, to dial any UK telephone number from the US, substitute the prefix 011-44 for the trunk prefix 0 of the UK domestic telephone number.
I think that the phone number is still the same so you would call it as if it is in the US. To answer my own question, (they have been here and now gone home again), you dial +1 followed by cell phone no.
It would be an international call, so yes you would have to pay in order to dial a number in the United Kingdom from the US.
On a mobile phone (cell phone), just dial +34 (including the plus symbol) and then the 9-digit Spanish telephone number. On a landline, a fax machine, or a cell phone that does not allow you to enter the plus symbol in a telephone number, replace the plus symbol with the US/North American international access prefix, 011.
Dial +1 (including the plus symbol), followed by the 10-digit US telephone number.
If the US mobile phone is in international roaming mode, you may be able to dial its normal US number. If the phone has swapped in a UK SIM card, you will need to dial the UK number.
Dial: 011 = international access prefix from the US 44 = country code for the UK 7XXX = mobile code (7400 through 7999) (6-digit mobile number) # = pound sign tells the telephone switch not to wait for more possible digits
The same way they always would. I.E. if you were in UK and wanted to call your friend, you would dial the international code (011), then the country and city codes, and then their number. Yes..even though you might be a couple of blocks from their house.
To call from Lebanon to the UK you must dial 00 first. So dial 00-44-20-356-42555. That is a number in London, UK. Also, when you dial that number, you will get an automated message "The cellular customer you are attempting to call is unable to receive your call." That message will repeat twice, then the phone will hang up. Bioware's international help line is currently not working.
In the US and Canada, dial *67 (or 1167 on a rotary phone) to block sending your Caller ID. Dial *82 (or 1182) to unblock. In the UK - you dial 141, then the number you're calling. It's different depending on your phone provider.