Let's assume the 2800W is both heaters plus the drum/blower motor (which may well be wrong, 100W seems skimpy for a fullsize dryer motor). On a US dryer, the motor would run from one leg to neutral, 120V. For a Bosch/Euro dryer? Or is this US Bosch? 2700W of heat also seems somewhat skimpy for a fullsize dryer. Or is it even fullsize?
However, if the 2700W of heating element is designed for 240V, resistance is fixed and half voltage equals half current, I-squared x R gives you 675W of heat. Not quite half a hair dryer. It definitely wouldn't exceed 20A, or the more conservative UL rating for single appliances at 120V on a 20A line, 1600W. But it would exceed your patience waiting for towels to dry. Roughly an hour and a half, depending upon humidity.
Running a (dedicated) 240V dryer on 120V may be possible but it's definitely not 'right'. This (government**) building runs 240V stoves on 218V*. 22V doesn't sound like that much is missing, but due to I-squared R above, it behaves as if 44V were missing, or 196V. You know how surface elements are supposed to light up on 'high'? Well they still do but you have to turn the room lights off to tell that they are 'lit up' at all.
(* 218V is a compromise between 120V to neutral in dual phase [normal household] power and 3-phase industrial power which produces 120V to neutral and 208V between 120* phases. They up the 120V to 125, and then the 208 comes out 218 (+5V on both phases). These are measured, not theoretical or imaginary values.)
(** Not only for the wonky power, but stay out of government institutional housing if at all possible. You wouldn't believe the smells. We're talking boiled pig intestines. If that doesn't sound bad enough, it smells worse.)