A telephone number is a sequence of decimal digits that uniquely indicates the network termination point. The number contains the information necessary to identify the intended endpoint for the call. Telephone numbers are often assigned to lines that have other devices hooked to them such as faxes, modems, subscribers and network services. Each such endpoint must have a unique number within the public switched telephone network. Most countries use fixed length numbers (for normal lines at least) and therefore the number of endpoints determine the necessary length of the telephone number. It is also possible for each subscriber to have a set of shorter numbers for the endpoints most often used. These "shorthand" numbers are automatically translated to unique telephone numbers before the call can be connected. Some special services have their own short numbers (e.g. 9-1-1, 4-1-1, 9-9-9 and 1-1-2). Many systems also allow calls within a local area to be made without dialing the local areas code.
Most telephone networks nowadays are interconnected in the international telephone network, where the format of telephone numbers is standardized by ITU-T in the recommendation E.164, which specifies that the entire number should be 15 digits or shorter, and begin with a country prefix. In most countries, this is followed by an area code or city code and the subscriber number, which might consist of the code for a particular telephone switch. ITU-T recommendation E.123 describes how to represent an international telephone number in writing or print, starting with a plus sign ("+") and the country code. To actually call an international number from a fixed line phone (mobiles generally allow the + to be entered directly) the + must be replaced with the international call prefix of the country the call is being made from.
The format and allocation of local phone numbers are controlled by each nation's respective government, either directly or by sponsored organizations (such as NANPA overseen by NeuStar Inc.) See Telephone numbering plan.
Before a telephone call is connected, the telephone number must be dialed by the calling party or caller. The called party might have equipment that presents caller ID before the call is answered.
Some companies have a sufficient need for internal extensions that the whole numbering range following the exchange code (448 in the example) represents company extensions. A real example of this in the UK is the former Post Office's headquarters in Central London: the PABX was made an end node exchange in the London Director area, with the code 432. The automanual board was given the extension number 1234, so in the days before all-figure numbering outside callers reached the switchboard by dialing HEAdquarters 1234.
The latter part of 1879 and the early part of 1880 saw the first use of telephone numbers at Lowell, Massachusetts. During an epidemic of measles, Dr. Moses Greeley Parker feared that Lowell's four telephone operators might succumb and bring about a paralysis of telephone service. He recommended the use of numbers for calling Lowell's more than 200 subscribers so that substitute operators might be more easily trained in the event of such an emergency. Parker was convinced of the telephone's potential, began buying stock, and by 1883 he was one of the largest individual stockholders in both the American Telephone Company and the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company.
Even after the assignment of numbers, operators still connected most calls into the early 20th century; "Hello Central, get me Underwood-342."
Connecting through operators or "Central" was usual until mechanical dialing of numbers became more common in the 1920s.
In North America, the digits 2-9 of phone numbers were alloted 3 letters of the alphabet apiece. In the UK, the letters O and Q were allocated to the digit 0, to reduce caller confusion among similar characters; digit 6 had only M and N, and digit 7 had P, R and S.
Phone numbers were not usually strictly numeric until the 1950s. From the 1920s until then, most urban areas had "exchanges" of two letters, followed by numbers. In the UK, however, exchanges in the major cities were represented by three letters followed by four numbers. This was considered easier to remember, although in the later part of this period it required the memorization of 7 characters (the same number of characters as is usual for local calling in 2006). A word would represent the first two digits to be dialed, for example "TWinbrook" for "89" ; "BYwater" for "29"; 736-5000 was "PEnnsylvania - 6- 5 thousand". UK numbers had no letters at all except for those in the Director areas, where the first three of the seven digits were assigned letters, and written "ABBey 1234" or "WHItehall 1212", for example. A lack of pronounceable words, and the fact that most telephones world-wide have no letters on anyway, have led to the abandonment of letter usage in directory numbers except for publicity purposes.
The use of numbers starting in 555- to represent fake numbers in US movies, television, and literature originated in this period.
Phone numbers were traditionally tied down to a single location, but the introduction of mobile telephones has changed this. In many countries, the practice of number portability allows customers to transfer a phone number from one local exchange carrier to another, or even from a fixed-line phone to a mobile phone.
Another is 888-8888, which was sold for USD$270,723 in Chengdu, China. 8 is traditionally considered a lucky number in Chinese culture.
tel: URI for telephone numbers
Telefonní číslo | Rufnummer | Numero telephonic | Telefoonnummer | 電話番号 | Numer telefonu | Puhelinnumero | Telefonnummer
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