Tunis - meaning and definition. What is Tunis
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What (who) is Tunis - definition

CAPITAL OF TUNISIA
Capital of Tunisia; Tunis, Tunisia; Tūnis; Borjsedria, Tunisia; Tunes, Tunisia; Emirate of Tunis; Tunis, TS; Tūnis, Tunisia; Etymology of Tunis; Τύνης; History of Tunis; Mellassine; City El Khadra (Tunis); Architecture of Tunis; List of people from Tunis
  • Carthage]]
  • Tunis Old Tribunal
  • Tunis at night
  • Tunis bus
  • Avenue Mohamed V]] in the financial district
  • [[Tunis-Carthage International Airport]]
  • [[Bab el Bhar]]
  • Bab Suika-Suker Square in Tunis, ca. 1899
  • National Library of Tunisia
  • Charles V]] into Tunis in 1535
  • Extension of the city in the 1950s with the district of El Menzah
  • Faculty of the Human and Social Sciences
  • Bardo National Museum
  • Avenue Habib-Bourguiba
  • Ibn Khaldoun-Kassus
  • left
  • Kasbah Square comprising the finance ministry and the prime ministry of Tunisia
  • quote= Mustafa Khaznadar was of Greek origin (born 1817), and proved to be one of the most influential persons Tunisia saw in her modern history. He took the interest of his master and the country to heart and did all he could to prevail on Ahmad Bey to see that Tunisia acquired as much as she could }}</ref>
  • City Hall
  • [[Zaytuna Mosque]]
  • Higher School of Communication of Tunis
  • Elderly man in Tunis wearing a [[Chechia]].
  • London Summer Olympics]]
  • Court of Dar Ben Abdallah
  • Court of Dar Soulaimania, once the boarding lodge of [[University of Ez-Zitouna]].
  • Historic map of Tunis by [[Piri Reis]]. [[The Walters Art Museum]].
  • Urban evolution between 1890 and 1914
  • Radès Bridge
  • Tunis Light Metro]]
  • [[Cathedral of St. Vincent de Paul]]
  • Souk En Nhas with items of copper
  • Statue of [[Ibn Khaldoun]] in Independence Square
  • Tunis Municipal Theatre
  • Tunis south surb train
  • Aerial view of Tunis.
  • Umayyad dynasty]]
  • Muslims in Tunis attend the mosque in 1899.
  • Walls and gates of the city in 1888
  • [[Tunisia Mall]]
  • View of Tunis c. 1890–1900. [[Zaytuna Mosque]] is slightly right of center.
  • View of the building of "Tour de la nation" in avenue Mohamed-V
  • A [[souk]] shopkeeper
  • Tunis road

TUNIS         
Toronto UNIversity System (Reference: OS)
TUNIS         
TUNIS (Toronto University System) was a Unix-like operating system, developed at the University of Toronto in the early 1980s. TUNIS was a portable operating system compatible with Unix V7, but with a completely redesigned kernel, written in Concurrent Euclid.
Tunis cake         
  • Cross-section of a Tunis Cake (Mary Berry recipe)
BRITISH CHRISTMAS DESSERT
Tunis Cake
A Tunis cake is a Madeira cake topped with a thick layer of chocolate and decorated with marzipan fruits. It is traditionally eaten at Christmas.

Wikipedia

Tunis

Tunis (Arabic: تونس Tūnis) is the capital and largest city of Tunisia. The greater metropolitan area of Tunis, often referred to as "Grand Tunis", has about 2,700,000 inhabitants. As of 2020, it is the third-largest city in the Maghreb region (after Casablanca and Algiers) and the eleventh-largest in the Arab world.

Situated on a large Mediterranean Sea gulf (the Gulf of Tunis), behind the Lake of Tunis and the port of La Goulette (Ḥalq il-Wād), the city extends along the coastal plain and the hills that surround it. At its core lies Ancient Medina, a World Heritage Site. East of the Medina, through the Sea Gate (also known as the Bab el Bhar and the Porte de France), begins the modern city "Ville Nouvelle", traversed by the grand Avenue Habib Bourguiba (often referred to by media and travel guides as "the Tunisian Champs-Élysées"), where the colonial-era buildings provide a clear contrast to smaller, older structures. Further east by the sea lie the suburbs of Carthage, La Marsa, and Sidi Bou Said.

As the capital of the country, Tunis is the focus of Tunisian political and administrative life and also the center of the country's commercial and cultural activities.

Examples of use of Tunis
1. More talks may be scheduled before the Tunis meeting.
2. Siroko travel, which operates from Tunis, are a good bet.
3. You could travel from Baghdad to Jerusalem to Cairo to Tunis without a question asked.
4. In 2003, the president bestowed the highest medal in Tunis upon the prince.
5. Kaddoumi, who lives in Tunis, has repeatedly tried to undermine Abbas.