It depends on your company and if someone is currently using the number..
You could look it up in a phone book. If you have a mobile phone, call your mobile number from your home phone and it will be displayed. If you do not have a cell phone then call someone with a cell phone and do the same.
No beccase the phone id is already registred
If you change a cell phone company you may be able to keep your same number, my mom did that she had the same number for as long as I remember, also if you live in Canada.
I think that the phone number is still the same so you would call it as if it is in the US. To answer my own question, (they have been here and now gone home again), you dial +1 followed by cell phone no.
Yes. The americans call it a cell due to the way the masts cover a small overlapping area (or cell).
If you are calling a cell phone, it does not matter where that cell phone is physically located. You dial the number the same way, no matter whether its owner is at home or traveling within the United States or traveling in another country.
The 360-473 prefix is in Bremerton, Washington. There's no way to know if a particular number is a cell phone or a landline. Local number portability means that you can change from a cell phone to a landline, or vice-versa, and keep the same number.
you just bluetooth it and if it comes up with a passcode just type in a random number and wait until the other cell phone asks for passcode and type the same number in that one.
The same way you would as if you were calling it while it was in America. The system knows where each phone is - and will connect the call no matter where the handset is.
Usually, the term "dial-up number" refers to the phone number you dial with your modem for dial-up Internet.
It's not possible. There cannot be two phone numbers, including the area code, that are exactly the same.
A toll-free number has no long distance charge associated, but calls from a mobile phone (cell phone) will still incur airtime charges, the same as local calls.