This has more than one possible meaning. It may mean that you keyed in the number incorrectly and didn't notice. It may mean that your friend has not been paying his phone bill and the phone company has cut him off. It may mean that your friend changed his or her number without telling you.
If you have received this message when you called somebody, it means that the person you tried to call is no longer using that phone, or they are out of minutes.
I couldn't wait to tell Meg about what I learned, so I dialed her number then and there.The toddler turned the dial on his toy to point to the chicken.
The United States used a similar but slightly different variation. New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Chicago first used the 3L-4N system (example DEAnsgate 3414 - the number for Kendals department store); but replaced that with the so-called "2-5 numbers" or 2L-5D, two letters and five digits (for example a number on the Pennsylvania exchange would be shown as PEnnsylvania 6-5000). This became the North American standard as customer-dialed long distance service (Direct Distance Dialing) came into use through the 1950s.
It depends on if your on a cell phone or on your house phone. On cell phones, some people have a certain amount of minutes that are free. Cell phones also have certain times at night that it will not cost you anything. Cell phones can also have free weekends if you get that. Your house phone always shows long distance phone calls and sometimes your phone shows local phone calls. It really depends on what kind of plan or phone you have got.
Yes you can but with circumstances, if the other cell phone is in your acct., all you have to do is go to the carrier and tell them what you wanted, but with some money in your hand. Cell phone company has rules and one of that rule is all about the privacy of the customer. First response is correct, but if the acct does not have your name on it, or you don't pay the bill, then you MAY NOT retrieve other persons messages. It would be an invasion of privacy.You can , however , scroll the last numbers dialed or numbers of the incoming calls if you know how to work that particular phone. With the name and model number, you can get the info how to do this. If the text or message retrieval is password or access code protected , you may not access it without that info or permission.
No. I called a couple of them, and I got a message saying that the number I dialed was incorrect both times.
Dialed In - 2005 was released on: USA: 1 October 2005
The cast of Dialed In - 2005 includes: Megan Abrigo as Host
1. Pick up your phone. 2. Dial *67 then your area code, and then your number (don't hang up yet) and wait for a tone. 3. Hang up, and pick up again. You should hear a higher pitched tone now. 4. Hang up. 5. Wait 5 seconds and your phone should ring.
You dial that number and ask if ___ is there. (boyfriends name) If she says "no" you'll know that he called her. At least, she know who he is. Usually, if a number is accidently dialed, the person would tell you that no one lives here by that name.
It sounds like there was a glitch in the switch. The telephone switch didn't recognize the number that you dialed and played the wrong error recording. If the problem persists, call the phone company and ask to report a technical fault.
If you have received this message when you called somebody, it means that the person you tried to call is no longer using that phone, or they are out of minutes.
That depends on where you're dialing from. In North America (USA, Canada, etc.), dialing 100 will get you an error recording telling you that you have dialed an invalid number. In some countries, dialing 100 will get you the local telephone operator. In other countries, it may get you some other service.
The last number dialed out on your phone can be retrieved by pressing the Send button. This works on cell phones and landlines.
Describe how dialed digits are transferred from a subscriber’s telephone to the local exchange
It could be. It also could be someone who dialed the wrong number.
makes it dialed