2-abc
3-def
4-ghi
5-jkl
6-mno
7-pqrs
8-tuv
9-wxyz
on the key pad theres numbers on the same buttons as letters.
when you have phone press up on D-pad twice
because it is used to add punctuation rather than letters/text
There is a pad, right in front of the drivers side cylinder head. On this pad, you will find a couple of letters, then a series of numbers. These numbers will tell you everything about your motor.
phones have a number pad with matching letters in alphabetical order. forget the numbers are there and punch in you words using these letters.
Press up on your d-pad twice. Then enter the number and press the cell phone green button.
The letters used to correspond to the telephone switch you were calling for example, if my phone number was in Portland, and the number was TIGARD5-1234, you'd dial the first two letters of TIgard as the numbers, which are 84. You'd end up dialing 845-1234. Since no places started with Z or Q, those letters weren't added until later. 1 never had any letters associated, and 0 was for the operator.
Hold Alt then press 164 on the numeric pad (not the numbers directly above the letters) then release.
Drivers side, right in front of the cylinder head, there is a pad on the block, with a series of numbers, starting with 2 letters, usually.
There are two types of protection, passcodes and passwords. The passcode is a number pad with the numbers as the protection. The password can be made out of letters, numbers, symbols, etc.
As the numbers begin with a zero up to nine, the answer is: 0×1×2×3×4×5×6×7×8×9 = 0
Press up twice on the directional button and you will find a blank screen on the phone. This will enable you to navigate around the key pad on the numbers until you can press the digits you want, for the cops, or paramedics, ZIT, etc. Then you just press the little green phone icon on there to ring out.