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Is it correct to write the telephone abbreviation as Tel when the . . . I think it's hard to argue that "Tel" is not correct given that a mobile phone is a telephone The only reason it should even matter to the reader is if calls to mobile phones cost more than calls to landline phones in your country, and even then if you're only providing one number they don't have any choice but to use that number
Should the number 0 be pronounced zero or oh? Zero is a little bit longer to pronounce, hence the "oh" As an American speaker, I've always heard it pronounced one 'oh' one, though that doesn't make it anymore correct than one zero one or one-hundred and one even It also tends to be a little more trendy and or less formal to use 'oh' (Hawaii Five-Oh for example)
vocabulary - Is plunger a familiar word for part of a phone . . . 2 I was looking for the name of the button on a telephone that you push to hang up On older phones where the receiver sits horizontally over two buttons, I've seen them called "plungers " Are people familiar with this term? Is there another term? Is the single button also called a "plunger?"
Cell phone? Cell? Mobile phone? Whats the correct term? In Australia, it has traditionally been a "mobile" - never a "cell" (unless you are deliberately trying to sound American!) However, it is increasingly becoming just a "phone", as landlines continue to disappear from households The one clarifying term might be "my phone" - this would guarantee it to be a mobile phone, rather than a landline
How to ask politely for the callers name on a phone call A simple web search on "telephone etiquette" should turn up an ample number of acceptable options As initially presented, I think this question is either too broad, too opinion-based, or too-lacking in preliminary research to be answerable here