telephone directory in English

noun
1
a book listing the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of the people in a particular area.
Imagine you are looking for a name in a telephone directory , but you can't remember its exact spelling.

Use "telephone directory" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "telephone directory" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "telephone directory", or refer to the context using the word "telephone directory" in the English Dictionary.

1. • Use a telephone directory to find names that are common in the language.

2. All employees can access the company's contact data stored in the shared telephone directory.

3. I found their address in the telephone directory and, as a precaution, phoned first.

4. For local office addresses, please refer to the blue pages of your telephone directory.

5. 6 Impulsively he grabbed the telephone directory, looked up her number and dialled it.

6. In Iceland, listings such as the telephone directory are alphabetised by first name rather than surname.

7. The telephone number and address of your local Community Health Council is listed in the telephone directory .

8. “The list read like a telephone directory —the Armas, the Bravos, the Coronels, the Leons, the Villagómez family.

9. 2 Getting Started: Usually a list of nursing-care facilities can be compiled by searching the local telephone directory.

10. You may find his Attainabilities in the telephone directory of the University of Miskolc, or the Bolyai Student Hostel's

11. 6 Diana and Carolyn would regularly while away a quiet evening ringing people with silly names who appeared in the telephone directory.

12. The addresses of advice organisations are usually listed in the telephone directory or the local library , or can be got from the local authority .

13. We could not talk to anyone outside, but we wrote letters to people living in unassigned territory after we found their addresses in the telephone directory.

14. In such a way the communication terminal (1) can make a telephone call by effectively using the telephone directory data in the exchange communication device (2).

15. So, by means of a telephone directory and the help of the English- and Afrikaans-speaking congregations, the Greek congregation began compiling an ‘address territory” of all the Greeks.

16. The contents of a telephone directory (10) of the second telecommunications device(s) (2) are modified according to the user identification data (4) that has been transmitted in this way.

17. The telephone number of your local council social services department will be found in your local telephone directory under local authority and then community information , or speak to your own GP .

18. Names, addresses, and phone numbers may be included in a directory only if they are listed in a commercial telephone directory or, if they are unlisted, if the member gives permission.

19. Just as we locate a phone number by using a telephone directory, a user may find locations of interest on the Internet by first gaining access to what are known as search sites.

20. The form Confer occurs with great frequency in central PA, its spelling reflecting the German (or Dutch) pronunciation; it may have originated in Europe (five Confers are listed in the German telephone directory) or on arrival in the U.S

21. Google Ads promises to “get you in front of customers when they’re already searching for businesses like yours”; which is the equivalent of being registered as Able Ablutioners in the front of the telephone directory, back in the day

22. Google Ads promises to “get you in front of customers when they’re already searching for businesses like yours”; which is the equivalent of being registered as Able Ablutioners in the front of the telephone directory, back in the day

23. Google Ads promises to “get you in front of customers when they’re already searching for businesses like yours”; which is the equivalent of being registered as Able Ablutioners in the front of the telephone directory, back in the day.