Regional IDs |
727 and others |
Numbers after 1 |
Opening numbers? |
256 and 512, e.g. |
Dialers' concerns |
Phone number parts |
Numbers following 1 |
Long-distance needs |
Phone-number intros |
Long-distance trios |
Three-digit prefixes |
Mississippi has four |
New York City has six |
New York City quintet |
New York City has five |
Numbers in parentheses |
Telephone number parts |
Trios starting numbers |
Quartet in Mississippi |
409 and 410, but not 411 |
Some three-digit numbers |
Things on calling cards? |
212 and 646, in Manhattan |
Some of them are overlaid |
Many new numbers these days |
Callers' three-digit numbers |
Long-distance callers' needs |
Phone number prefixes: 2 wds. |
Numbers usually in parentheses |
Prefixes featured on some maps |
Long-distance prefixes (2 wds.) |
307 for Wyoming and 808 for Hawaii |
307 for Wyoming and 907 for Alaska |
907 and 808, for Alaska and Hawaii |
Long-distance callers' necessities |
They're often found in parentheses |
Numbers which are often parenthesized |
Michigan's 989 is the highest of them in America |
Three-digit groups that begin phone numbers: 2 wds. |
Alaska, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming each have just one of them |