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  1. Telephone numbers in Portugal. Portugal changed to a closed telephone numbering plan on 31 October 1999; previously, the trunk prefix was '0', but this was dropped. [1] For landline subscribers, the area code, prefixed by the digit '2', was incorporated into the subscriber's number. For mobile subscribers, formerly seven (to call another ...

  2. After 2000, other operators were allowed to use TP's telecommunications infrastructure under Third-party Access. From the communist era Poland inherited an underdeveloped and outmoded system of telephones, with some areas (e.g. in the extreme South East) being served by manual exchanges. In December 2005 the last analog exchange was shut down.

  3. Overview. The country calling code of Serbia is +381. Serbia and Montenegro received the code of +381 following the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992 (which had +38 as country code). Montenegro switched to +382 after its independence in 2006, so +381 is now used only by Serbia. [2]

  4. Telephone numbers in Liechtenstein. Liechtenstein previously used the Swiss telephone numbering plan (+41) under area code 075. [1] (. This was dialled as +41 75 from outside Switzerland and Liechtenstein). [2] However, on 5 April 1999, it adopted its own international code +423. [3] Consequently, calls from Switzerland now require ...

  5. wikipedia-en:Telephone_numbers_in_Poland This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

  6. Telephone numbers in Iceland are seven digits long and generally written in the form xxx xxxx or xxx-xxxx and the E.123 format specifies +354 xxx xxxx from abroad since the country code is +354 . There are no area codes in this closed numbering plan and the international call prefix is 00. Numbers of mobile phones tend to begin with either 6xx ...

  7. Telephone numbers in Andorra. Telephone numbers in Andorra are six digits, with fixed line numbers beginning with the digits 8 and 7 and mobile telephone numbers with the digits 3 and 6. Toll-free numbers are eight digits, beginning with 1800 (if they are accessible only within Andorra) or 1802 (if they also can be reached internationally).