10, they usually start with 04 but if you are calling from overseas they have an area code
If you are calling from a UK mobile to Australia, dial 00 (international prefix from the UK) 61 (country code for Australia) and then the Australian number, dropping the leading 0 To call from Australia to a UK mobile, dial 0011 (international prefix from Australia) 44 (country code for Australia) and then the UK mobile number, dropping the leading 0
08
Yes, provided that the mobile user has enabled international roaming. You just enter the Australian mobile number exactly the same way you do when it is in Australia.
You can't. And they're called mobile phones in Australia, not cellphones.
001127xxxxxxxxx
For American numbers, prefix with country code +1
Dial the Australian mobile number, exactly the same way that you do when the mobile is at home in Australia. The mobile phone network will automatically route the call to the mobile, wherever it is roaming, and the roaming user will pay any applicable surcharges.
The main emergency number in Australia is 000; however, on a GSM mobile phone, you can also dial 112.
0061 - no that's for calling Australia from New Zealand. The answwer is 0064
From a GSM mobile phone, dial +1 310 and the 7-digit mobile number. From a landline, dial 0011 1 310 and the 7-digit mobile number.
To call an Australian mobile phone, you dial the Australian mobile number. It does not matter if the mobile phone is physically in Australia, Honolulu, or anywhere else.
If calling from the UK, dial the same number in the same format that you always use. If calling from Australia, you'll need +44 to be added to the beginning of the UK number, and remember to omit the leading 0 from that 07 mobile number.