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Dear readers,

I’m asking about a word, but I have difficulty telling you what word I need. Let me try. You see, I have a cell phone, but I can’t make a call or send a sort message. I have to buy a card first, at the back of which there is a number that I need to input into the cell phone. In this case, what do I have to say about what I buy? What am I buying? I buy a voucher card, or I buy …. what?

Another thing to do is to transfer some money to an account via automatic telling machine, then they will send something into my cell phone. When I check it, it says something like you still have 20 dollar and valid until 15 March. So, what do I have in my cell phone that I can use for making phone calls? Is it a deposit worth 20 dollar or what?

Forgive my poor English and expression. And thank you for your help.

2007-01-30 19:13:05 · 3 answers · asked by The Mask 4 in Education & Reference Other - Education

3 answers

It's voucher card. I thought you mean SIM Card, :-p

I don't quite understand about the second one. Maybe it means you still can make phone calls or send text messages worth up to $20 and it only valids til 15 March.

2007-01-30 19:24:04 · answer #1 · answered by ira a 4 · 0 0

1). SIM card
2). Pulse, rate

2007-01-31 03:26:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You have "minutes" on your card.... or it could be "units"... but I think it's minutes..... hmmmm... I'm confused too now- I think it's units.... but I always say minutes, though.

2007-01-31 03:23:08 · answer #3 · answered by justmemimi 6 · 1 0

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