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  • DISPATCHER NEEDED
  • Mississauga, ON, Canada

    DISPATCHER NEEDED

    WE ARE LOOKING FOR DISPATCHER TO JOIN OUR TEAM.


    MONDAY TO FRIDAY WORK


    START 9AM-6PM


    Requirements:


    Must have knowledge of load clearing/customs

    Must have knowledge of ACE/ACI


    Must able to provide updates to customers on loads

    Must able to work longer hours if needed

    Keep Track of drivers schedule

    Communicate with drivers, shippers, and receivers to provide accurate tracking updates.


    NO CALLS PLEASE***


    EMAIL RESUMES TO PARAM@PRTRANSPORT.CA

    Apply now: DISPATCHER NEEDED

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • gassed up
  • gassed up

    v. To be hyped up and encouraged to think more of one's self than needed; to be pumped up provoking arrogance and cockyness.  "Aye, Jay's new girl gots him gassed up, like he's ish or something." 

  • Dispatch Boat
  • Dispatch Boat

    A vessel ranging in size from a small boat to a large ship tasked to carry military dispatches from ship to ship, from ship to shore, or, occasionally, from shore to shore.

  • GREETINGS FROM THE DS
  • GREETINGS FROM THE DS

    Train orders from the dispatcher

  • Launch
  • Launch

    1. A large motorboat. Traditionally, the launch was the largest boat carried by a warship. 2. To dispatch a ship down a slipway, prior to fitting-out and commissioning.

  • fix
  • fix

    (1) a needed drug dose to hold off withdrawal (2) a shot of heroin. See shoot

  • beasty
  • beasty

    Some one who is raw, the best or able to get active when needed.  "You can’t get with Jordan on DJ Hero, that fool too beasty!" 

  • four-twenty (4:20) (420) (4-20)
  • four-twenty (4:20) (420) (4-20)

    n. Commonly known as the time to smoke pot. It has come to mean everything from the act of smoking, the stuff that's smoked, and the optimum smoking time. Because 99% of today's culture DOESN'T know what 420 means, it has become a code people use to identify and talk with each other without outsiders knowing. Also known for the date, April 20th, which is the day to smoke pot all day, "the hippie holiday." Most pot smokers use 420 for just that, but, this date also happens to be Hitler's birthday which most possibly connected to or resulted in the selection of the April 20th date of the Columbine tragedy. Note: I get a large amount of emails trying to correct me, saying that 420 is actually the California police code for possession of marijuana. Sorry- but that's an urban legend. Here are the facts straight from the LAPD: "There are several codes of law in CA that dictate drug offences. The Penal Code(PC) and the Health and Safety Code(H&S). Most of the drug offences are covered by the H&S. There is no 420 H&S, there is a 420 PC and it is "Preventing entry onto Public property". We sometimes have codes that the dispatcher uses on the radio to let us know what kind of call we are going to, but it usually is the same as the code section. Here are some of the Marijuana charges: 11359 H&S Possesion of MJ for Sales 11360(A)H&S Sales of MJ 11357(B)H&S Possesion of less than 1 oz of MJ 

  • OS
  • OS

    On (train) sheet; to report a train by to dispatcher

  • SMOKE or SMOKE AGENT
  • SMOKE or SMOKE AGENT

    Locomotive fireman. Smoker is engine or firebox. Smoking 'em or running on smoke orders is a dangerous method, now obsolete, of running a train from one station or siding to another without orders from the dispatcher. You moved cautiously, continually watching for the smoke of any train that might be approaching you on the same track

  • Adviso
  • Adviso

    A kind of dispatch boat or advice boat, most predominant in the French navy. Equivalent to the modern sloop.

  • pint
  • pint

    n the standard U.K. measure of beer - equivalent to 0.568 litres in new money or twenty ounces in American money. It is normally possible to buy a half-pint instead of a pint, but doing so will mar you for life in the eyes of your peers. Drinking half-pints of beer is generally seen as the liquid equivalent of painting your fingernails and mincing. At some point in history (no idea when) a British king (not sure which one) elected to raise tax on beer but upon discovering that he needed an act of parliament to change the tax, he instead changed the size of the pint (which only required a royal edict). The smaller sixteen-ounce American pint, therefore actually represents the original size of the British pint. As you can see IÂ’ve not researched this at all. I just wrote down what someone told me. There are many times in my life when IÂ’m forced to make a simple choice between the real truth and a funny story.

  • * DICK SCRATCHER
  • * DICK SCRATCHER

    Dispatcher

  • caravan
  • caravan

    1 n terrible device which attaches to the back of your car and allows you to take your whole family on holiday at minimal expense and with maximum irritability. They’re more popular in Europe than they are in the U.S., where they’re called “trailers.” Be careful not to confuse a touring caravan (which a family will generally keep outside their house and drag behind their normal car somewhere for a few holidays a year) with a static caravan, which is generally deposited once by a truck and left there. Americans call both of these things “trailers,” and where a distinction is needed they’ll call the touring variants “travel trailers.” The devices that Americans call a “fifth wheel” — caravans which attach to a conventional diesel truck — are pretty much non-existent in the U.K. Another caravan variant common to both sides of the Atlantic is the “trailer tent,” which is like a caravan except the walls and roof fold out like some sort of ghastly mobile puppet theatre. No doubt you’re much less confused now. I could go on about caravans for days. 2 v the act of staying in a caravan: Doris has taken it into her head to go caravanning this weekend.

  • MOVING SPIRIT
  • MOVING SPIRIT

    Train dispatcher, more often called DS

  • punter
  • punter

    n guy. A punter is usually a customer of some sort (the word originally meant someone who was placing bets at a racecourse), but this need not be the case. Because of the word’s gambling roots, punters are regarded slightly warily and shouldn’t necessarily be taken at face value: When I came out of the tube station there was some punter there saying his car had broken down and he needed five quid to put petrol in it. Because American Football isn’t very popular in the U.K., Brits are unaware of the role of a punter on a football team (though they do share the everyday definition of the word “punt”).

  • DETAINER or DELAYER
  • DETAINER or DELAYER

    Train dispatcher

  • Dispatches
  • Dispatches

        Loaded dice

  • woofter
  • woofter

    n homosexual. Yet another term for a homosexual, in case the Brits needed some more.

  • hatches, matches and dispatches
  • hatches, matches and dispatches

    Noun. Births, marriages and deaths, usually in relation to newspaper columns.

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang DISPATCHER NEEDED

DISPATCHER NEEDED

  • gassed up
  • gassed up

    v. To be hyped up and encouraged to think more of one's self than needed; to be pumped up provoking arrogance and cockyness.  "Aye, Jay's new girl gots him gassed up, like he's ish or something." 

  • Dispatch Boat
  • Dispatch Boat

    A vessel ranging in size from a small boat to a large ship tasked to carry military dispatches from ship to ship, from ship to shore, or, occasionally, from shore to shore.

  • GREETINGS FROM THE DS
  • GREETINGS FROM THE DS

    Train orders from the dispatcher

  • Launch
  • Launch

    1. A large motorboat. Traditionally, the launch was the largest boat carried by a warship. 2. To dispatch a ship down a slipway, prior to fitting-out and commissioning.

  • fix
  • fix

    (1) a needed drug dose to hold off withdrawal (2) a shot of heroin. See shoot

  • beasty
  • beasty

    Some one who is raw, the best or able to get active when needed.  "You can’t get with Jordan on DJ Hero, that fool too beasty!" 

  • four-twenty (4:20) (420) (4-20)
  • four-twenty (4:20) (420) (4-20)

    n. Commonly known as the time to smoke pot. It has come to mean everything from the act of smoking, the stuff that's smoked, and the optimum smoking time. Because 99% of today's culture DOESN'T know what 420 means, it has become a code people use to identify and talk with each other without outsiders knowing. Also known for the date, April 20th, which is the day to smoke pot all day, "the hippie holiday." Most pot smokers use 420 for just that, but, this date also happens to be Hitler's birthday which most possibly connected to or resulted in the selection of the April 20th date of the Columbine tragedy. Note: I get a large amount of emails trying to correct me, saying that 420 is actually the California police code for possession of marijuana. Sorry- but that's an urban legend. Here are the facts straight from the LAPD: "There are several codes of law in CA that dictate drug offences. The Penal Code(PC) and the Health and Safety Code(H&S). Most of the drug offences are covered by the H&S. There is no 420 H&S, there is a 420 PC and it is "Preventing entry onto Public property". We sometimes have codes that the dispatcher uses on the radio to let us know what kind of call we are going to, but it usually is the same as the code section. Here are some of the Marijuana charges: 11359 H&S Possesion of MJ for Sales 11360(A)H&S Sales of MJ 11357(B)H&S Possesion of less than 1 oz of MJ 

  • OS
  • OS

    On (train) sheet; to report a train by to dispatcher

  • SMOKE or SMOKE AGENT
  • SMOKE or SMOKE AGENT

    Locomotive fireman. Smoker is engine or firebox. Smoking 'em or running on smoke orders is a dangerous method, now obsolete, of running a train from one station or siding to another without orders from the dispatcher. You moved cautiously, continually watching for the smoke of any train that might be approaching you on the same track

  • Adviso
  • Adviso

    A kind of dispatch boat or advice boat, most predominant in the French navy. Equivalent to the modern sloop.

  • pint
  • pint

    n the standard U.K. measure of beer - equivalent to 0.568 litres in new money or twenty ounces in American money. It is normally possible to buy a half-pint instead of a pint, but doing so will mar you for life in the eyes of your peers. Drinking half-pints of beer is generally seen as the liquid equivalent of painting your fingernails and mincing. At some point in history (no idea when) a British king (not sure which one) elected to raise tax on beer but upon discovering that he needed an act of parliament to change the tax, he instead changed the size of the pint (which only required a royal edict). The smaller sixteen-ounce American pint, therefore actually represents the original size of the British pint. As you can see IÂ’ve not researched this at all. I just wrote down what someone told me. There are many times in my life when IÂ’m forced to make a simple choice between the real truth and a funny story.

  • * DICK SCRATCHER
  • * DICK SCRATCHER

    Dispatcher

  • caravan
  • caravan

    1 n terrible device which attaches to the back of your car and allows you to take your whole family on holiday at minimal expense and with maximum irritability. They’re more popular in Europe than they are in the U.S., where they’re called “trailers.” Be careful not to confuse a touring caravan (which a family will generally keep outside their house and drag behind their normal car somewhere for a few holidays a year) with a static caravan, which is generally deposited once by a truck and left there. Americans call both of these things “trailers,” and where a distinction is needed they’ll call the touring variants “travel trailers.” The devices that Americans call a “fifth wheel” — caravans which attach to a conventional diesel truck — are pretty much non-existent in the U.K. Another caravan variant common to both sides of the Atlantic is the “trailer tent,” which is like a caravan except the walls and roof fold out like some sort of ghastly mobile puppet theatre. No doubt you’re much less confused now. I could go on about caravans for days. 2 v the act of staying in a caravan: Doris has taken it into her head to go caravanning this weekend.

  • MOVING SPIRIT
  • MOVING SPIRIT

    Train dispatcher, more often called DS

  • punter
  • punter

    n guy. A punter is usually a customer of some sort (the word originally meant someone who was placing bets at a racecourse), but this need not be the case. Because of the word’s gambling roots, punters are regarded slightly warily and shouldn’t necessarily be taken at face value: When I came out of the tube station there was some punter there saying his car had broken down and he needed five quid to put petrol in it. Because American Football isn’t very popular in the U.K., Brits are unaware of the role of a punter on a football team (though they do share the everyday definition of the word “punt”).

  • DETAINER or DELAYER
  • DETAINER or DELAYER

    Train dispatcher

  • Dispatches
  • Dispatches

        Loaded dice

  • woofter
  • woofter

    n homosexual. Yet another term for a homosexual, in case the Brits needed some more.

  • hatches, matches and dispatches
  • hatches, matches and dispatches

    Noun. Births, marriages and deaths, usually in relation to newspaper columns.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing

DISPATCHER NEEDED

  • Dispatcher
  • dispatchers to relay information, direct personnel, and coordinate their operations. An emergency dispatcher, also known as public safety dispatcher,

  • Flight dispatcher
  • A flight dispatcher (also known as an airline dispatcher or flight operations officer) assists in planning flight paths, taking into account aircraft

  • Train dispatcher
  • A train dispatcher (US), rail traffic controller (Canada), train controller (Australia), train service controller (Singapore) or signaller (UK), is employed

  • Emergency medical dispatcher
  • services (EMS), and the dispatching and support of EMS resources responding to an emergency call. The term "emergency medical dispatcher" is also a certification

  • The Dispatch
  • The Dispatch". Axios. Archived from the original on April 18, 2021. Retrieved April 12, 2021. Bienaime, Pierre (June 16, 2020). "'We don't need your

  • Dynamic dispatch
  • message dispatcher. Each instance has a single type whose definition contains the methods. When an instance receives a message, the dispatcher looks up

  • Multiple dispatch
  • $a, Stellar-Object:D $b ) { $a.mass == $b.mass } # Define a new multi dispatcher, and add some type constraints to the parameters. # If we didn't define

  • Dispatch (logistics)
  • requires the dispatcher to pull out every card, one at a time, and read it. If two or more resources are sent to the same call, the dispatcher has a lot

  • Computer-aided dispatch
  • information. The dispatcher then receives the call from the call-taker and is able to dispatch the call to those available. The dispatcher's screen would

  • Dispatched
  • Dispatched are a Swedish melodic death metal band from Södertälje (originally from the Gnesta Municipality) formed in 1992. Dispatched was formed just