A telephone number in the United States consists of:
Depends on the distance. 10 digits if in the states or the country you are from. But country to coutry could be 15 digits because all countries have their own codes.
It is either 10 or 11, depending if the phone numberis long-distance.
11 counting the 1 or 0 for long distance or operator but 0 is not used much anymore no operators really available 1-222-333-1234
All telephone numbers in the North American Numbering Plan, including the USA, Canada, and 18 island nations and territories in or near the Caribbean, have a total of 11 digits:Country code: 1 digit (country code +1)Area code: 3 digitsSubscriber number: 7 digits
60615 is not an area code. Area codes in the US are 3 digits and are used with telephone numbers. The postal ZIP Code 60615 is for Chicago, IL.
001 is the country code for america... 414 is the area code for Milwaukee. However - the number in your question has too many digits in it. (Subscriber numbers are usually 7 digits).
Telephone area codes in the United States are always three digits.
A us bank account has #12 digits in california
The US uses ten digits in their number format. For example - the number would look like 800-123-1234. In that example, 800 is the area code, and the remaining 7 digits are the subscribers number.
None :) You only gave us 4 numbers!
Country code +1 is North America (USA, Canada, etc.), and area code +1 207 is the US state of Maine, but you have too many digits for a valid telephone number.Not a valid number.
Blocks of numbers, often entire exchanges (in the US, this is the three digits following the area code), are assigned to local phone companies. The phone companies then assign these to their customers. You can request a specific number from your phone company; they may, or may not, charge extra for such a number, if it's available.
A telephone number in France has 9 digits. As dialed within France, you dial a trunk prefix (usually 0), followed by the 9-digit number, for a total of 10 digits. From outside France, you dial your international access prefix (most commonly 00, but many countries use other prefixes), plus country code +33, plus the 9-digit number. On a GSM mobile phone, you can dial +33 (including the plus sign) and the 9-digit number.
All current US bills have 8 digits and at least two letters in their serial numbers. $5 bills and higher have two letters before the digits and one after. The second letter before the digits indicates which Federal Reserve District distributed the bill. $1 and $2 bills only have one letter before the digits. The Federal Reserve District letter is inside the seal on the left side of the bills' face.
Ten