Array ( [0] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7292 [name] => Blountville [phone] => 4236629200 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 662-9200 [npa] => 423 ) [1] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7297 [name] => Bristol [phone] => 4237931600 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 793-1600 [npa] => 423 ) [2] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7299 [name] => Erwin [phone] => 4237350058 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 735-0058 [npa] => 423 ) [3] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7318 [name] => Greeneville [phone] => 4232789700 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 278-9700 [npa] => 423 ) [4] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7287 [name] => Johnson City [phone] => 4237229700 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 722-9700 [npa] => 423 ) [5] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7300 [name] => Kingsport [phone] => 4237231600 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 723-1600 [npa] => 423 ) [6] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7320 [name] => Mountain City [phone] => 4237270603 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (423) 727-0603 [npa] => 423 ) [7] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7367 [name] => Murfreesboro [phone] => 6154391783 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (615) 439-1783 [npa] => 615 ) [8] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7362 [name] => Nashville [phone] => 6157241683 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (615) 724-1683 [npa] => 615 ) [9] => Array ( [rc_id] => 7495 [name] => Harriman [phone] => 8652950433 [pref] => 1 [parsed_phone] => (865) 295-0433 [npa] => 865 ) )

Mailing Address & Location

CTI Networks / TN.net
5170 East Trindle Road
Mechanicsburg, PA 17050

Driving Directions:
Get Map

Office Hours

Home Services
Monday - Friday    8:00am - 10:00pm
Saturday / Sunday    9:00am - 9:00pm
 
Business Services
Monday - Friday    8:00am - 5:00pm
Saturday / Sunday    Closed
 
Billing
Monday - Friday    8:00am - 8:00pm
Saturday    10:00am - 5:00pm
Sunday    2:00pm - 6:00pm

Phone Numbers

City Number
Blountville      (423) 662-9200
Bristol      (423) 793-1600
Erwin      (423) 735-0058
Greeneville      (423) 278-9700
Johnson City      (423) 722-9700
Kingsport      (423) 723-1600
Mountain City      (423) 727-0603
Murfreesboro      (615) 439-1783
Nashville      (615) 724-1683
Harriman      (865) 295-0433
Toll-Free (877) 726-3848

Contact via E-mail:

E-mail

Advertising
marketing@tn.net
Billing for Home
billing@tn.net
Billing for Business
commercialbilling@tn.net
Business Services
business@tn.net
DSL Broadband
dsl@tn.net
Home Services
info@tn.net
ISDN
isdn@tn.net
New User Questions
newuser@tn.net
T1/ATM/Frame
t1@tn.net
Tech Support for Home
techsupport@tn.net
Web Design
webdesign@tn.net
Web Hosting / Co-location
hosting@tn.net


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Conditions for Bristol, TN, US

64°F
Cloudy
7 mph NW | 0.1 mi
Your local forecast:

Wed Thu
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Sunrise / Sunset:
6:46 am / 6:30 pm
data courtesy of Weather.com

US President Barack Obama speaks on healthcare and health insurance reform at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pennsylvania. Obama has launched a populist assault on price-gouging American insurance firms, escalating his last-ditch bid to pass a historic health reform bill.(AFP/Saul Loeb)AP - The nation's top health official challenged insurers on Wednesday to join President Barack Obama's push to overhaul the medical system, arguing that if the effort fails it will hurt them as well as other Americans.


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petard
\puh-TAHRD\
noun

a case containing an explosive to break down a door or gate or breach a wall



a firework that explodes with a loud report

Example Sentence
"The blast occurred on Sunday afternoon in a farmer's house in the Anhui Province, destroying six rooms which stored materials for making petards and firecrackers." (RIA Novosti, January 11, 2010) Aside from historical references to siege warfare, and occasional contemporary references to fireworks, "petard" is almost always encountered in variations of the phrase "hoist with one's own petard," meaning "victimized or hurt by one's own scheme." The phrase comes from Shakespeare's Hamlet: "For 'tis the sport to have the enginer / Hoist with his own petar." "Hoist" in this case is the past participle of the verb "hoise," meaning "to lift or raise," and "petar(d)" refers to an explosive device used in siege warfare. Hamlet uses the example of the engineer (the person who sets the explosive device) being blown into the air by his own device as a metaphor for those who schemed against Hamlet being undone by their own schemes. The phrase has endured, even if its literal meaning has largely been forgotten.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

It is in men as in soils where sometimes there is a vein of gold which the owner knows not of.

Swift (1667-1745) English Author