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Old March 31st 12, 02:36 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.rail.americas
Bruce[_2_] Bruce[_2_] is offline
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Default Telephone line numbers, prefixes, and area codes

Charles Ellson wrote:
On Fri, 30 Mar 2012 20:08:36 +0000 (UTC), "Adam H. Kerman"
wrote:

Graham Nye wrote:
On 30/03/2012 18:40, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
Guy Gorton wrote:


What is a cell phone? Used in prisons?


Oh, good grief. You use the concept in your country.


You aren't aware that mobile phones use a cellular network?


I expect he is. Guy is pointing out that you are cross-
posting to two newsgroups where we call such devices
mobiles.


So if "cellular" is an international concept, is it acceptable to everyone
else for Guy to pretend to be obtuse?

In the United States, they are called cell phones and mobile phones.

Ditto in the UK with "cell phone" often used to distinguish them from
"cordless" telephones, both being mobile.



I had a very early Vodafone mobile phone in 1986, a Motorola with a
handset that clipped to the top of a lead/acid battery about the size
of one on my 1150cc motorcycle. It was marketed as a "cellular
telephone" or "cell phone" for short.

There were only two UK networks at that time, Vodafone and Cellnet.
Cellnet was of course a contraction of "cellular network".

So the term "cell phone" has been in use in the UK for more than a
quarter of a century.