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IT Recruitment Video Design Translation - Localization


Recruitment - We Find People
TNT Corporate & Commercial Video
Translation N' Localization Services
Corporate Video
Video Production design specific to your particular industry. Training curriculum design specific to your needs. Complete turnkey operation. We can transcribe any electronic presentation or audio video and transform it into any language. Web Base training, any subject into any language, in any format. Web, CD, DVD, digital tape, VHS or professional Beta.
TV Commercials
7 Emmy nominations for broadcast productions & commercials. Award winning TV commercials. Affordable, professional quality completed on your time schedule.
Contact Us with your needs.
We Find People! 602.464.3031 - TNT Placement, an Arizona Corporation
Translation N' Localization Services
Localization of software, web sites, help files, user manuals. technical documents, training manuals or marketing material, anything you need transformed into any language for any subject. TNT has over 70 translators tested, approved and contracted to work on your projects. Please go directly to the TNT Project Bidder and attach your document to receive a free quote.
IT Staffing - We Find People
We recruit QA software hardware engineers with or without localization experience. Engineers (all disciplines), Java designers, Analyst, Programmers to Technical Writers. We Find People! Translators native to the target language with localization and Quality Assurance Testing experience. Not only does this transform your industry message to a multitude of people in the target language, it is a guarantee for accuracy by TNT Placement, Inc., a Phoenix, Arizona Corporation. Our client base includes some of the largest technology companies in the world. After all, we have been recruiting people for over 20 years.


APHORISM
APHORISM: A SHORT, POINTED SENTENCE EXPRESSING A WISE OR CLEVER OBSERVATION OR A GENERAL TRUTH; ADAGE.
1. The nicest thing about the future is that it always starts tomorrow.
2. Money will buy a fine dog but only kindness will make him wag his tail.
3. If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all.
4. Seat belts are not as confining as wheelchairs.
5. A good time to keep your mouth shut is when you're in deep water.
6. How come it takes so little time for a child who is afraid of the dark to become a teenager who wants to stay out all night?
7. Business conventions are important because they demonstrate how many people a company can operate without.
8. Why is it that at class reunions you feel younger than everyone else looks?
9. Scratch a dog and you'll find a permanent job.
10. No one has more driving ambition than the boy who wants to buy a car.
Persuade vs. Convince
Some people like to distinguish between these two words by insisting that you persuade people until you have convinced them; but "persuade" as a synonym for "convince" goes back at least to the 16th century. It can mean both to attempt to convince and to succeed. It is no longer common to say things like "I am persuaded that you are an illiterate fool," but even this usage is not in itself wrong.
Job Title
The general rule is to capitalize a title like "President" only when it is prefixed to a particular president's name: "It is notable that President Grover Cleveland was the first Democratic president elected after the Civil War." Similar patterns apply for titles like "principal," "senator," "supervisor," etc.
But often the American president's title is used as a sort of substitute for his name, and routinely capitalized despite the objections of some style manuals: "The President pardoned the White House Thanksgiving turkey yesterday." And the British would never write anything other than "The Queen ate strawberries in the Royal Enclosure." The Pope is also usually referred to with a capital P when the specific individual is meant: "The Pope announced that he will visit Andorra next month." Following these common patterns is not likely to get you in trouble unless your editor has adopted a contrary rule.
If no specific individual is meant, then definitely use lower case: "We need to elect a homecoming queen"; "The next president will inherit a terrible budget deficit."



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