It depends on the hotel. Dial for an outside line, then as if outside the hotel.
That depends on where you work. If you have an in-house phone system, you may need to dial 9 or some other prefix to get an outside line.
In some cases when automatically dialing a number, you may need to tell the autodialer to pause to allow for a secondary dial tone. For example, if you dial '9' to get an outside line on your business phone system, you may need to program a pause after the 9 to allow time for the outside dial tone.
If you dial '9' first, that usually means that you are using a company phone system that lets you dial internal extensions directly. Dialing '9' just means you're dialing outside the company switchboard.
*67 is the code in North America (USA, Canada, etc.) to block your caller ID from being sent, on a per-call basis. (If you are on a rotary or pulse-dial phone, you can use 1167 instead of *67.) This code should always be the very first thing dialed, before any other codes or prefixes. For example, if you want to block caller ID and also cancel call waiting, you should dial *67 first, then *70. So, to dial a long distance call with caller ID blocked, dial:*67 (or 1167) first,then other "star codes" such as *70,then the long distance company code (if applicable): 101xxxx,then the long distance prefix 1,then the area code and number.
Fred Dial is 5' 9".
Dialing any digit will temporarily drop dial tone.
Dial 0056 (the country code for Chile) then the rest of the number.
If a phone is in a business, all you usually have to do is dial '9' and wait for a regular dial tone.
If calling to an Aruba land line telephone from the United States, dial 011-297 + Aruba personal/business phone number. For example, to dial the Aruba Tourism Authority from the United States, dial 011-297-582-3777.If calling to an Aruba cellular phone from the United States, dial 011-297-9 + Aruba cell phone number.If calling to an Aruba land line telephone from elsewhere abroad, dial 297 + Aruba personal/business phone number. For example, to dial the Aruba Tourism Authority from elsewhere abroad, dial 297-582-3777.If calling to an Aruba cellular phone from elsewhere abroad, dial 297-9 + Aruba cell phone number.
Dial Hot Line - 1970 TV was released on: USA: 8 March 1970
9 is often used to access an outside line on office telephone systems. It tells the system that you want to make an external phone call instead of just ringing another extension on the private system. Without the '9', the system could not easily tell apart, for example, the internal extension number 200 and an external public phone number that started with 200. 011 is used as an international calling code in North America. Dialing it tells the phone network that you want to make an international call outside America, and then lets you dial the overseas number.