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TNT Placement offers 3 core services that seem unrelated. For example, you may ask how does award winning Audio Video Production and Recruiting relate? Television productions requires the recruitment of very unique, specialized individuals, who are at the top of their game in that particular discipline..

Perhaps you require a cameraman that can follow a golf ball off a tee at 300 MPH and follow the tiny ball through the sky until it lands and bounces on the fairway. Unique individual true. Because the camera has a single eye view in black & white. The ball is white, the sky is white (how does he/she do it ?). We recruit the best, not the individual who says they are the best. The television industry requires precise recruitment for every crew & cast member. TNT is an excellent choice for all your, TV, IT recruiting needs. Java to Admin, try us! We have recruited TV & IT people for companies like, Intel, Motorola and Applied Materials to name a few

Goballization follows with the translation of product into customer target languages. We provide complete script to screen turn key productions for Television commercials, Training and Marketing audio/video. DVD, Web, any formant. Any subject, any language.

Software Hardware Localization and QA Testing - any language.

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The popular salad made of shredded cabbage was originally "cole slaw," from the Dutch for "cabbage salad." Because it is served cold, Americans have long supposed the correct spelling to be "cold slaw"; but if you want to sound more sophisticated go with the original.

"Compact disc" is spelled with a "C" because that's how its inventors decided it should be rendered; but a computer hard disk is spelled with a "K" In modern technological contexts, "disks" usually reproduce data magnetically, while "discs" (CD-ROMs, DVDs, etc.) reproduce it "optically," with lasers.

The area under the eaves right next to the front of a building used to be called the "eavesdrop," and somebody listening in secretively from such a position came to be called an "eavesdropper." Unfortunately, so few people distinctly pronounce the V in "eavesdrop" that many are misled into misspelling it "easedrop."

Want to sound like a good old boy who doesn't give a hoot what foreigners think? Say "EYE-rack." But if you want to sound knowledgeable, say "ear-ROCK." Politicians who know better sometimes adopt the popular mispronunciation in order to sound more folksy and down to earth.

Heal is what you do when you get better. Your heel is the back part of your foot. Achilles' heel was the only place the great warrior could be wounded in such a way that the injury wouldn't heal. Thus any striking weakness can be called an "Achilles' heel." To remember the meaning of "heal," note that it is the beginning of the word "health."
Similarly in standard English, Iran is not pronounced "eye-RAN" but "ear-RON."

-----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.

11.  There are no new sins; the old ones just get more publicity.

12.  There are worse things than getting a call for a wrong number at 4 AM. Like this: It could be a right number.

13.  No one ever says "It's only a game" when their team is winning.

14.  I've reached the age where the happy hour is a nap.

15.  Be careful reading the fine print. There's no way you're going to like it.

16. The trouble with bucket seats is that not everybody has the same size bucket.

17.  Do you realize that in about 40 years, we'll have thousands of old ladies running around with tattoos? (And rap music will be the Golden Oldies!)

18.  Money can't buy happiness -
but somehow it's more comfortable to cry in a Corvette than in a Yugo.

19.  After 50 if you don't wake up aching in every joint, you are probably dead.

* Early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

* If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.

* Support bacteria - they're the only culture some people have.

* Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.

* When everything is coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.

* Ambition is a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy.

* Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now.

* Everyone has a photographic memory. Some just don't have film.

* Shin: a device for finding furniture in the dark.

* Many people quit looking for work when they find a job.

* Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.

* If I worked as much as others, I would do as little as they.

24 hours in a day ... 24 beers in a case ...coincidence?

Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?

What happens if you get scared half to death twice?

If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence that you tried.
Although academics have long promoted "Native American" as a more accurate label than "Indian," most of the people so labeled continue to refer to themselves as "Indians" and prefer that term. In Canada, there is a move to refer to descendants of the original inhabitants as "First Nations" or "First Peoples," but so far that has not spread to the U.S.

The original pronunciation of "dew" and "due" rhymed with "pew", but American pronunciation has shifted toward sounding all of these words alike, and the result is much confusion in standard phrases. On a damp morning there is dew on the grass. Doo on the grass is the result of failing to pick up after your dog. The most common confusion is substituting "do" for "due" (owing) in phrases like "credit is due," "due to circumstances," and "bill is due."

"Do" is normally a verb, but it can be a noun with meanings like "party," "hairdo," and "dos and don'ts." Note that in the last phrase it is not necessary to insert an apostrophe before the "S," and that if you choose to do so you'll wind up with two apostrophes awkwardly close together: "don't's."
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TNTPlacement

Phoenix, Arizona 85020
Phone: 602.464.3031
 

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