Probably, but the initial '0' is missing. If you are calling the number from within the UK you need that '0', if you are calling from Another Country you don't.
This is a UK mobile (cell phone) number.
An example of a valid mobile phone number might be +1 417 555-0123, except with an actual mobile phone number instead of the fictitious 555-0123. An example in the UK would be +44 7700 900123, which is the (fictitious) UK mobile number 07700 900123 written in international format. A valid mobile phone number is a real phone number that actually connects to a working mobile phone.
That is a valid format for a UK mobile (cell) number. The 7 in the position that it is in identifies it as a mobile number. 00 is the international gateway code, 44 is the country code for UK. Short of dialling it there's no way to know whether it is actually an active number.
Dial the UK mobile number exactly the same way you do when the mobile is in the UK.
Dial the UK mobile number exactly the same way you do when the mobile is at home in the UK. The mobile network will automatically locate it.
If you are in the UK, dial the mobile number. If you are outside the UK, dial the international access prefix, then the country code for the UK (+44), and then the mobile number without the leading 0.
Because it's a mobile number, it can be anywhere in the UK.
there is no dialling code , just dial the number as if the person u r calling in the UK as long as he has a UK mobile number
Yes somebody did answer.
To dial a UK mobile, you always dial the UK mobile number, no matter where the mobile is physically located.
To dial any number in the US (landline or mobile) from the UK, dial 00 1 followed by the area code and number.
To call a UK-based mobile phone, anywhere in the world that it may be physically located, just dial the UK mobile numberexactly the same way you do when the mobile is in the UK.