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Writing your mobile number in Gmail

I'm in Kazakhstan, which has the amazingly cool 007 International Code.
Most folk here use mobiles, often having no landline.
The mobile numbers are usually given as starting with the "+" sign, but sometimes this is replaced by 8 . No idea why.

My question- if I'm given a phone number from country X, starting with a "+" ,
1. How do I dial it from a land line which has no "+" key?
2. The mobile I use here has an 11 digit number, excluding the "+".
If I dialled that 11 digit number from the UK, would I get this phone, or one in theUK that had the same 11 digit number?
 
I'm in Kazakhstan, which has the amazingly cool 007 International Code.
Most folk here use mobiles, often having no landline.
The mobile numbers are usually given as starting with the "+" sign, but sometimes this is replaced by 8 . No idea why.

My question- if I'm given a phone number from country X, starting with a "+" ,
1. How do I dial it from a land line which has no "+" key?
2. The mobile I use here has an 11 digit number, excluding the "+".
If I dialled that 11 digit number from the UK, would I get this phone, or one in theUK that had the same 11 digit number?
You replace the '+' with the International prefix for where you are dialling from. In the UK, that's 00. (Mobile phones seem to understand '+'.)
 
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You do realise that changing the length of phone numbers will require a massive reorganisation of the entire phone network?

Would it?

I have a 4 digit prefix for my mobiles, there a different lengths of prefixes for different cities (3 being the lowest, some at least as long as 5) and local phone numbers have different lengths, too. All of these numbers I can call from the USA, and I can make calls to the USA from all these numbers.

I would have assumed that using 7 digits for every number wouldn't be more than a convention rather than hardware restrictions. Especially since I cannot imagine that providers in the US use hardware build specifically for the US.
 

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