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System: Above the African average and continuing to be upgraded; key centers are Sfax, Sousse, Bizerte, and Tunis; telephone network is completely digitized [3] domestic: trunk facilities consist of open-wire lines, coaxial cable, and microwave radio relay
The following are the telephone codes in Tunisia. Codes Country code: 216: International prefix: 00: Trunk prefix : 0 ... Tunis: 70, 71 and 79 Zaghouan: 72 Mobile phone:
Liste des préfixes des opérateurs de téléphonie Mobile et Fixe au Maroc; Official Numbering Plan of Morocco (incomplete) World Telephone numbering Guide (outdated) Plan de numérotation - Agence National de Règlemantation des Télécommunications (French and Arabic) Archived 2012-02-24 at the Wayback Machine; ITU allocations list
After a year off, the race returned in 1931 at a new venue, a much larger triangular highway circuit laid out between the then separate cities of Tunis and Carthage. [3] The 1931 season-opening race was much more serious in its entry with eleven European grand prix and 16 1.5-litre cars racing with the smaller motor cycle-powered cars having ...
It was founded on the initiative of four people – a medical student, a natural sciences teacher, a lawyer and a physical education teacher – on 29 September 2011, shortly after the Tunisian revolution.
Menzel Temime (منزل تميم) is a town in northeast Tunisia southeast of the peninsula of Cap Bon.. The municipality of Menzel Temime was established on 19 February 1921, the municipal boundaries stretching over an area of 25,000 hectares.
Je les ai pris 'I took them' → Je ne les ai pas pris 'I did not take them' Je voudrais regarder un film et m'endormir 'I would like to watch a movie and fall asleep' → Je voudrais regarder un film et ne pas m'endormir. 'I would like to watch a movie and not fall asleep' Other negative words used in combination with ne are: negative adverbs
Tunisian Arabic, or simply Tunisian (Arabic: تونسي, romanized: Tūnsi), is a variety of Arabic spoken in Tunisia. [7] It is known among its 12 million speakers as Tūnsi, ⓘ "Tunisian" [8] or Derja (Arabic: الدارجة; meaning "common or everyday dialect" [9]) to distinguish it from Modern Standard Arabic, the official language of Tunisia.