Many mobile phone services offer free nights and weekends. Each phone carrier offers different times that their nights start at. Here is a list of nights for some major carriers:
AT&T:9PM-6AM
Verizon:9PM-6AM
Sprint:7PM-7AM
Tmobile:9PM-7AM
Alltel:9PM-6AM
Of course all mobile phone providers have free mobile-to-mobile, so it would be cheapest if you and your boyfriend/girlfriend both had the same carrier, then it would be free all the time for as many hours as you need!
He would call you everyday when he has a time too ! <3
It depends on if you are asking about land line or cellular service, and then upon the provider. For land lines it may also depend on the time of day the call is made, and on what long distance carrier you use. The best way to find out the exact cost is to call your service provider and/or long distance carrier.
The word "long" is used in English to describe something that has a great distance from one end to the other, or something that extends a considerable way in time or duration.
It depends entirely upon your carrier and what (they) consider "long distance", or not. With Nextel/Sprint, since Hawaii is (in) the U.S. --- you SHOULD be able to call from Hawaii to Oregon, with NO long distance charges. You will be charged, of course, for the minutes used --- but not long distance. I have Nextel and am never charged "long distance". IF I call after 7pm, CST, I don't even have to pay minutes. IF I call during "prime time" (7am to 7pm --- except week-ends), then yes, I pay for minutes. Again, it depends upon your carrier, their rules and regulations, and your particular "plan". Check with your carrier.
Distance = Rate * Time or, for our purpose Time = Distance/Rate Time = 4 miles/12 mph = ~ 1/3 of an hour----call it 20 minutes
It can last a long time if you are both committed. I have been in a long distance relationship for 7 months
'Speed' . If you also specify the direction in which it moves by that distance, then you have 'velocity'.
That number is what we call the object's "speed".
Speed is measured by calculating the distance you have gone and how long it took you to get there. speed = distance over time
a long time a long time
If the relationship is kept long distance for a long period of time. TATER-TOT TAYLA
Distance = Speed x Time Time = Distance/Speed Speed = Distance/Time Use one of these formulas to figure it out.