It all starts when you make a call to your desired,after that your data is transmitted through telegraph poles to your local switching station,this determines where it should go and if it is local it will take it through telegraph poles to the house which you have dialed to, but if it is a national call it will take it to the main switching station and will be sent there using telegraph poles to the house you dialed to.For a international call the data that has arrived to the main switching station is sent using RF (radio-frequency) waves to a satellite and that satellite send the data to that specific countries main switching station and then sent to the dialed house number.
On a mobile phone, +1. On a landline phone, 00 1.
You can't dial a semicolon on a landline phone, nor on a mobile phone, for that matter. It's probably a good thing, then, that you never need to dial a semicolon on any kind of telephone, since a semicolon cannot be part of a telephone number.
In general, you will always have a dial tone when you are calling from a landline phone, but never from a mobile phone.
To set up call forwarding from a landline to a cell phone, on your landline phone you dial 72# (or *72 depending on your area) then dial the number you wish to forward to. eg. Your cell phone number is 123-456-7890. To set up call forwarding to this number you would dial the following on your landline phone: 72# 123-456-7890 or *72 123-456-7890. To remove call forwarding on your landine phone, you dial 73# (or *73 depending on your area) on your landline phone.
Dial +34 (from a mobile phone) or 00 34 (from a landline phone), followed by the 9-digit Spanish telephone number.
Dial the full number - including the area code.
This can be done from a cell phone exactly the same as you can from a landline. Simply dial *67 then dial the number. This will show up on their caller ID as a blocked call.
You dial a fax number on a fax machine exactly the same way you would dial the same phone number from a landline phone at the same location.
because you didnt pay your bill or the line got cut somewhere
From a cell phone, dial +1 at the start. From a landline, dial 001 at the start. For example: +1(XXX)-XXX-XXXX or 001(XXX)-XXX-XXXX
if youre calling to the Philippines dial 011632 continue with the phone number for landline / for cellphone 01163917 or 916 as long as u dial all the numbers of the cell
Australian 1800 and 1300 toll-free numbers are not intended for use from outside Australia. You may be able to get through by simply prefixing the Australian number with telephone country code +61 (or 00 61 as dialed from a landline phone in Singapore), but you will pay international toll rates for the call if it goes through. If the call fails, your best option is to look on the Internet for a regular geographic number for the company you are trying to contact.