Local jobs, jobs near me
Jobs at: Paul Gupta & Associates
Jobs in : Buenos Aires Argentina
Jobs at: Gupta & Associates Accounting Inc
Jobs at: Raman Gupta, Anchal Garg
Jobs at: Paul Gupta & Associates
(HBX528) | Mystery Shopper en Bariloche
(HBX528) | Mystery Shopper en Bariloche
Jobs in : San Carlos de Bariloche Río Negro Argentina
Jobs at: The Shopper Experience
Asesor/a Comercial de vehículo nuevo en Huercal de Almería
Asesor/a Comercial de vehículo nuevo en Huercal de Almería
Jobs in : Huércal de Almería Almería Spain
(FS44) Mystery Shopper en Bariloche
(FS44) Mystery Shopper en Bariloche
Jobs in : San Carlos de Bariloche Río Negro Argentina
Jobs at: The Shopper Experience
Jobs in : New York New York United States
Jobs in : Cozumel Quintana Roo Mexico
Jobs at: KRISPY KREME SERVICIOS ADMINISTRATIVOS
Jobs in : Mississauga ON Canada
Jobs at: Suraj Gupta Associates Ltd.
Administrative assistant - legal
Administrative assistant - legal
Jobs in : North York ON Canada
Se busca niñera en Cipolletti - Trabajo para niñera en Cipolletti
Se busca niñera en Cipolletti - Trabajo para niñera en Cipolletti
Jobs in : Cipolletti Río Negro Argentina
Child caregiver - private home
Child caregiver - private home
Jobs in : North York ON Canada
T-429] Mystery Shopper en Bariloche
T-429] Mystery Shopper en Bariloche
Jobs in : San Carlos de Bariloche Río Negro Argentina
Jobs at: The Shopper Experience
B084] - Mystery Shopper En Bariloche
B084] - Mystery Shopper En Bariloche
Jobs in : San Carlos de Bariloche Río Negro Argentina
Jobs at: The Shopper Experience
Mystery Shoppers que residan en Río Gallegos
Mystery Shoppers que residan en Río Gallegos
Jobs in : Gobernador Gregores Santa Cruz Argentina
Jobs at: The Shopper Experience
Slangs & AI meanings
Gupta is British slang for an Indian, Pakistani.
To have altered someone’s profile on a social media site without their permission.
A TERM THAT Â THE MEDIA CREATED BACK IN THE EARLY 80'S THAT IS HATED BY BBOYS EVERY WHERE. ALSO A WORD USED BY BBOYS TO DESCRIBE A COMMERCIAL WANNA BE BBOY, OR A BREAKER WITH NO FOUNDATION THAT ONLY DOES GYMNASTIC MOVES .
n median. Far from being a sought-after restaurant booking, this is in fact what Brits call the grassy area in the centre of a motorway which is there to stop you colliding with oncoming traffic quite as easily as you might.
Public Affairs Officer. The officer that is designated to deal with the media.
A TERM THAT Â THE MEDIA CREATED BACK IN THE EARLY 80'S THAT IS HATED BY BBOYS EVERY WHERE. ALSO A WORD USED BY BBOYS TO DESCRIBE A COMMERCIAL WANNA BE BBOY, OR A BREAKER WITH NO FOUNDATION THAT ONLY DOES GYMNASTIC MOVES .
Man Crush Monday.
Derogatory term used by South African whites during the apartheid era, now considered an offense and beeped out from the media (like an ordinary curse in USA)
(n.) A legal way to purchase and download software from a digital vendor like Steam or Direct 2 Drive. They allow the user to legally circumvent traditional Software purchases from a retail store. The upside is you get the software sooner, the downside is it comes with no printed media, disks, or other physical manifestations of the purchase.
salary of £100,000 a year - media industry slang - named after Geoff Seymour (1947-2009) the advertising copywriter said to have been the first in his profession to command such a wage. Seymour created the classic 1973 Hovis TV advert featuring the baker's boy delivering bread from a bike on an old cobbled hill in a North England town, to the theme of Dvorak's New World symphony played by a brass band. The actual setting was in fact Gold Hill in Shaftesbury, Dorset. Incidentally the Hovis bakery was founded in 1886 and the Hovis name derives from Latin, Hominis Vis, meaning 'strength of man'. The 1973 advert's artistic director was Ridley Scott.
Knackered (tired). I'm right Kerry'd - Kerry Packer is an Australian media magnate (and bleeding rich!)
Overheard in Sydney, AUS, on several occasions during bitchy conversations, as in "Look at that creature, she's wearing FMBs!". The origin is apparently a 1995 newspaper article in which Germaine Greer attacked Suzanne Moore, another feminist. In a review of Greer's 1999 book 'The Whole Woman' (http://www.nigelberman.co.uk/feature1_27.htm), Kira Cochrane summarised it as follows: 'It was dubbed the catfight of the year. Having repeated false allegations that Germaine Greer had had a hysterectomy, feminist columnist Suzanne Moore (then working for The Guardian) found herself the target of a stream of vitriol. "So much lipstick must rot the brain," thundered Greer, describing Moore's appearance as, "hair birds-nested all over the place, fuck-me shoes and three fat layers of cleavage." The less liberal media were ecstatic, falling on the fight like hounds. With two of Britain's most prominent feminists waging verbal warfare the papers crowed that any ideals of sisterhood had finally been proved a sham."'
Adj. 1. Of a woman, sexually attractive. [Orig. U.S./Black] 2. Having a sexually desirable bottom, usually full and well rounded. [Orig. U.S./Black] * The expression, in this form, was popularize by Beyonce Knowles in the song of the same title she wrote for, and performed with, Destiny's Child. Its first appearence in the media was in the U.S. sitcom A Different World in 1993.
Nickname for a peculiar style of hair favoured by middle-aged balding males who are attempting to disguise the fact that they ARE losing their hair. Nickname is also used for men who use this hairstyle. One of the most famous people thus endowed is Andrew O'Neill, is one time editor of The Times (UK) now turned media jock. I hear from Mark Skinner that despite changing roles, "Brillo" still gets his regular pasting in the satirical magazine, Private Eye.
Talk of WMDs was all that filled the media in the run up to the Iraq war in 2003. It was a term used to cover everything from ballistic missiles, to their presumed payloads of conventional and biological weaponry. Once it was realised they never existed, all talk of WMDs ceased.
GUPTA MEDIA
The Gupta family is a wealthy and influential business family from India, with close ties to former South African President Jacob Zuma and his administration
The Gupta Empire was an Indian empire during the classical period of the Indian subcontinent which existed from the mid 3rd century to mid 6th century
Rekha Gupta (born 19 July 1974) is an Indian politician who is serving as the 9th Chief Minister of Delhi since 20 February 2025. She is the fourth woman
Vin Gupta is an American public health physician and pulmonologist who is a prominent medical analyst for NBC News and MSNBC. He is also a Managing Director
Neena Gupta (born 4 July 1959) is an Indian actress and television director who works in Hindi films and television along with few Malayalam films. She
Masaba Gupta (born 2 November 1989) is an Indian fashion designer and actress with her own label called House of Masaba. Masaba Gupta was born in 1988
Shark Tank India. Gupta was born in Delhi, India. His father's name is Neeraj Gupta and mother's name is Jyoti Kochar Gupta. Gupta completed his early
Black Warrant: Confessions of a Tihar Jailer by Sunil Gupta and Sunetra Choudhury, about Gupta's time as a jailer at Tihar Prisons. Created by Vikramaditya
Sidhant Gupta (born 23 April 1989) is an Indian actor who predominantly works in Hindi television and films. He made his film debut in 2012 with Tutiya
Printline Media Pvt Ltd. It was launched by journalist Shekhar Gupta in August 2017. Printline Media Pvt. Ltd, founded by journalist Shekhar Gupta, was incorporated
GUPTA MEDIA
Gupta is British slang for an Indian, Pakistani.
To have altered someone’s profile on a social media site without their permission.
A TERM THAT Â THE MEDIA CREATED BACK IN THE EARLY 80'S THAT IS HATED BY BBOYS EVERY WHERE. ALSO A WORD USED BY BBOYS TO DESCRIBE A COMMERCIAL WANNA BE BBOY, OR A BREAKER WITH NO FOUNDATION THAT ONLY DOES GYMNASTIC MOVES .
n median. Far from being a sought-after restaurant booking, this is in fact what Brits call the grassy area in the centre of a motorway which is there to stop you colliding with oncoming traffic quite as easily as you might.
Public Affairs Officer. The officer that is designated to deal with the media.
A TERM THAT Â THE MEDIA CREATED BACK IN THE EARLY 80'S THAT IS HATED BY BBOYS EVERY WHERE. ALSO A WORD USED BY BBOYS TO DESCRIBE A COMMERCIAL WANNA BE BBOY, OR A BREAKER WITH NO FOUNDATION THAT ONLY DOES GYMNASTIC MOVES .
Man Crush Monday.
Derogatory term used by South African whites during the apartheid era, now considered an offense and beeped out from the media (like an ordinary curse in USA)
(n.) A legal way to purchase and download software from a digital vendor like Steam or Direct 2 Drive. They allow the user to legally circumvent traditional Software purchases from a retail store. The upside is you get the software sooner, the downside is it comes with no printed media, disks, or other physical manifestations of the purchase.
salary of £100,000 a year - media industry slang - named after Geoff Seymour (1947-2009) the advertising copywriter said to have been the first in his profession to command such a wage. Seymour created the classic 1973 Hovis TV advert featuring the baker's boy delivering bread from a bike on an old cobbled hill in a North England town, to the theme of Dvorak's New World symphony played by a brass band. The actual setting was in fact Gold Hill in Shaftesbury, Dorset. Incidentally the Hovis bakery was founded in 1886 and the Hovis name derives from Latin, Hominis Vis, meaning 'strength of man'. The 1973 advert's artistic director was Ridley Scott.
Knackered (tired). I'm right Kerry'd - Kerry Packer is an Australian media magnate (and bleeding rich!)
Overheard in Sydney, AUS, on several occasions during bitchy conversations, as in "Look at that creature, she's wearing FMBs!". The origin is apparently a 1995 newspaper article in which Germaine Greer attacked Suzanne Moore, another feminist. In a review of Greer's 1999 book 'The Whole Woman' (http://www.nigelberman.co.uk/feature1_27.htm), Kira Cochrane summarised it as follows: 'It was dubbed the catfight of the year. Having repeated false allegations that Germaine Greer had had a hysterectomy, feminist columnist Suzanne Moore (then working for The Guardian) found herself the target of a stream of vitriol. "So much lipstick must rot the brain," thundered Greer, describing Moore's appearance as, "hair birds-nested all over the place, fuck-me shoes and three fat layers of cleavage." The less liberal media were ecstatic, falling on the fight like hounds. With two of Britain's most prominent feminists waging verbal warfare the papers crowed that any ideals of sisterhood had finally been proved a sham."'
Adj. 1. Of a woman, sexually attractive. [Orig. U.S./Black] 2. Having a sexually desirable bottom, usually full and well rounded. [Orig. U.S./Black] * The expression, in this form, was popularize by Beyonce Knowles in the song of the same title she wrote for, and performed with, Destiny's Child. Its first appearence in the media was in the U.S. sitcom A Different World in 1993.
Nickname for a peculiar style of hair favoured by middle-aged balding males who are attempting to disguise the fact that they ARE losing their hair. Nickname is also used for men who use this hairstyle. One of the most famous people thus endowed is Andrew O'Neill, is one time editor of The Times (UK) now turned media jock. I hear from Mark Skinner that despite changing roles, "Brillo" still gets his regular pasting in the satirical magazine, Private Eye.
Talk of WMDs was all that filled the media in the run up to the Iraq war in 2003. It was a term used to cover everything from ballistic missiles, to their presumed payloads of conventional and biological weaponry. Once it was realised they never existed, all talk of WMDs ceased.