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The postal code refers to the post office at which the receiver's P. O. Box is located. Kiribati: KI: no codes Korea, North: KP: no codes Korea, South: 1 August 2015 KR: NNNNN Previously NNN-NNN (1988~2015), NNN or NNN-NN (1970~1988) Kosovo: XK: NNNNN A separate postal code for Kosovo was introduced by the UNMIK postal administration in 2004 ...
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4 Europe. 5 Oceania. 6 See also. ... This list of national postal services shows the individual national postal administrations of the world's states. Africa
Post office sign in Farrer, Australian Capital Territory, showing postcode 2607. A postal code (also known locally in various English-speaking countries throughout the world as a postcode, post code, PIN or ZIP Code) is a series of letters or digits or both, sometimes including spaces or punctuation, included in a postal address for the purpose of sorting mail.
The post codes are sorted by geographical location. Numbers starting with 10-19 are part of Stockholm ; otherwise, the lower numbers are part of the bigger city areas in the south, and increase northwards.
The postal codes follow a geographic pattern and most Danes can tell which region an address belongs to based on the postal code alone. 0000–0999: special postal codes, reserved for government use, post offices and package centers; 1000–2999: Copenhagen and the surrounding area; 3000–3699: North Zealand; 3700–3799: Bornholm
Each rack is identified by an individual postal code. The 1993 system has geographic zones on the first (Postleitzonen) and on the second level (Postleitregion), e.g., 1 is North East Germany, and 10 is a zone in the inner city of Berlin. German Postleitzahl map of the first two digits.
The first digit of a Polish postal code specifies the large area (postal region) to which the address concerned belongs. The numbers run clockwise around the map of Poland, from Warsaw (0) in the central east of the country, through east, south, west and north and then back to Łódź (9), close to the geographical centre of Poland.