True." - "Hi, this is Anis from Never Stop Tracking. A while ago, I asked you guys to come up with some terms, tracking phrases, and expressions that are commonly used throughout the industry. Then, I would try to answer your questions like that and explain, giving you definitions about those words." - "So let's start. I have quite a few, and this may be a several part video, like a series of videos where we talk about these phrases." - "Let's start with the first one: LTL and TL. LTL is less than a truckload, and TL is a truckload. Then, we also have partial. Most people will say that partial and LTL are different, but different companies have different definitions. Usually, LTL is considered a partial, anyway." - "So they would say sometimes that LTL would be, and then the word that, it's self-explanatory. It says less than a truckload. Usually, they would say that's like one to six pallets loaded on the truck." - "TL is a full truckload, and that means that the whole trailer is full all the way to the end or that the whole trailer is reserved for this one load. Sometimes, when you book a load, it might not be a full load per se. When they load the trailer, the pallets are not all the way to the end, maybe only halfway down, and you have room, but the broker or the customer booked a full trailer. You know they put a seal on it, and you cannot put anything else on it, meaning it's reserved for their load and treated as a full load." - "Sometimes, when you get a half trailer like that, you can add another LTL or partial load on top of that and make some extra money. If your driver is...