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Tigris - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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CollabNet, Facilitating Collaborative Software Development ... Open Source Software Engineering Tool ... Tigris.org Status Info...
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CollabNet, Facilitating Collaborative Software Development ... Tigris.org Community Scope ... Tigris.org is hosted by CollabNet, but the Tigris mission is one for the entire open source movement and one that has attracted senior open source developers from many organizations...
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River that was a boundary of Mesopotamia, or the 'land between the rivers' (Tigris and Euphrates) The Tigris was the eastern of the two rivers and flowed from a source deep in the Armenian mountains all the way to the Persian Gulf, about 1,200 miles. ... Elsewhere on the Web: Ancient Trade on the Tigris; This great site...
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Our word Tigris comes from an Old Persian word that can be translated as "fast" or "arrow-like". The ancient Sumerians called the river Idigna, and in the Akkadian language that was spoken in Babylonia and Assyria, its name was Idiqlat.
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Tiger - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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CollabNet, Facilitating Collaborative Software Development ... Easy to use ... Tigris.org Status Info...
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Tigris ; Arabic: dijla ... Along its course, the Tigris passes through some of the major cities of Iraq, like Mosul, Tikrit, Samarra, and the capital Baghdad. At Qurna, Tigris joins with the Euphrates, and for the remaining 170 km to the outlet at the Persian Gulf, it is known as Shatt al-Arab.
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The Tigris River is 1,150 miles long and begins on the Armenian plateau in Turkey. In Iraq, it receives additional water from four important tributaries: the Greater Zab, the Lesser Zab, the Adhem and the Diyala. As a result, the Tigris is more subject to catastrophic flooding than the Euphrates.
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Encyclopedia article about Tigris. Information about Tigris in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. tigris river, tigris and euphrates ... , stood on the banks of the Tigris, and the river served as an important transportation route. The Tigris floodplain was cultivated by...
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