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Telephone numbers in Turkey went from six (2+4) to seven digits (3+4) circa 1988. There used to be more than 5,000 local area codes of varying lengths (one to five digits) with correspondingly varying local number lengths. The new system imposes three-digit area codes for provinces and seven digit local phone numbers.
Users can switch carriers while keeping number and prefix (so prefixes are not tightly coupled to a specific carrier). If there is only 32.. followed by any other, shorter number, like 32 51 724859, this is the number of a normal phone, not a mobile. 46x: Join (discontinued mobile phone service provider) [3] 47x: Proximus (or other) 48x
Calling codes in Europe. Telephone numbers in Europe are managed by the national telecommunications authorities of each country. Most country codes start with 3 and 4, but some countries that by the Copenhagen criteria are considered part of Europe have country codes starting on numbers most common outside of Europe (e.g. Faroe Islands of Denmark have a code starting on number 2, which is most ...
Türk Telekom, a private company established from the state-owned PTT in 1995, is responsible for landline telephone services in Turkey. As of 2013, the number of landline subscribers was 15.2 million. [1] The international dialing code for Turkey is +90.
This was accomplished by adding the digit "9" to the beginning of any phone number that started with a "9" (government and semi-government connections), and adding the digit "3" to any phone numbers that did not start with the number "9". [1] It is common to write phone numbers as (0xx) yyyyyyy, where xx is the area code.
UPC-A compatible - Used to issue restricted circulation numbers within a company 050–059: UPC-A compatible - GS1 US reserved for future use 060–099: UPC-A compatible - United States: 100–139 United States: 200–299: Used to issue GS1 restricted circulation number within a geographic region [1] 300–379 France and Monaco: 380 Bulgaria ...
There were 12.3 million (12.300.390) fixed phone lines, 82.2 million (82.795.432) mobile phone subscribers, and 80.9 million broadband subscribers (10.6 million xDSL, 3.8 million Fibre, 1.2 million Cable, 65 million Mobile) by Q3 2020. [4] Telecommunications liberalisation in Turkey is progressing, but at a slow pace.
Since 2 March 2003 direct international calls from Northern Cyprus to Turkey have been possible. Now callers from Cyprus can call Northern Cyprus either through Turkey by dialing 0090 392 xxxxxxx (calls charged at international rates), or by using 0139 (calls charged at local rates).