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  2. Telephone numbers in Chile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Chile

    Total number portability exists in Chile, [2] so users can freely move from one service provider to another without losing their number, regardless of connection technology, whether land-line, mobile or VoIP. Therefore, a number beginning with "8" or "9" no longer denotes that it is a mobile phone number.

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  4. Telephone numbers in Romania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Romania

    A number from Suceava was 982-xx-xxx, but then it became 98-2xx-xxx. Apart from Bucharest, Brașov was the first city to have 6-digit numbers. Many smaller town or rural area calling implied using manual commutation circuits operated by humans. Short numbers for special services, like cab companies, were three digits long, starting with 0:

  5. Telephone numbers in Bulgaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Bulgaria

    The first digit also shows if a particular subscriber number is operated by BTC or another operator. The area codes are always cited with the trunk code. When dialing all subscriber numbers must be prefixed with trunk and area code except short codes (see below). Numbers starting with 700, 800 and 90x as well as mobile ones are prefixed by '0 ...

  6. Telephone numbers in Bahrain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Bahrain

    Majority of the fixed land line numbers start with 1. Cellular (Mobile) phone numbers and pager numbers start with 3* or 663* or 669* depending on the service provider. There is no area code in Bahrain, however the two digit numbers after the land line prefixes represent different cities or regions in Bahrain.

  7. Telephone numbers in Norway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Norway

    Before 1993, telephone numbers would consist either of a two-digit area code and a six-digit subscriber number in cities and large towns, for example, (02) 412702 in Oslo, [1] or a three-digit area code and a five-digit subscriber number in smaller towns, for example, (034) 83000 in Larvik.

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