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  2. Tunisian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunisian_cuisine

    Lablabi is a thick soup made with chickpeas and garlic Location of Tunisia. Tunisian cuisine, the cuisine of Tunisia, consists of the cooking traditions, ingredients, recipes and techniques developed in Tunisia since antiquity.

  3. Claudia Sulewski - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia_Sulewski

    Claudia Sulewski (born February 19, 1996) is an American YouTuber, host and actress. In 2007, she started making videos on her YouTube channel in her hometown of Chicago, before moving to Los Angeles in 2014, where she jumped into hosting. A year later, she began hosting videos for Teen Vogue ' s YouTube channel, becoming its regular host.

  4. Tunisians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunisians

    Tunisians (Arabic: تونسيون Tūnisiyyūn, Tunisian Arabic: توانسة Twènsa [ˈtwɛːnsæ]) are the citizens and nationals of Tunisia in North Africa, who speak Tunisian Arabic and share a common Tunisian culture and identity.

  5. Claudia Cardinale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia_Cardinale

    Claudia Cardinale was born Claude Joséphine Rose Cardinale in La Goulette, a neighbourhood of Tunis, Tunisia, on 15 April 1938. [6] [7] Her father, Francesco Cardinale, was a railway worker, born in Gela, Sicily. [8]

  6. Tunisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunisia

    The word Tunisia is derived from Tunis; a central urban hub and the capital of modern-day Tunisia.The present form of the name, with its Latinate suffix -ia, evolved from French Tunisie, [26] [27] in turn generally associated with the Berber root ⵜⵏⵙ, transcribed tns, which means "to lay down" or "encampment". [28]

  7. Internet censorship in Tunisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_censorship_in_Tunisia

    The prominent video sharing Web sites youtube.com and dailymotion.com were blocked, apparently because Tunisian activists used them to disseminate content critical of the regime's human rights practices. The Web site of the OpenNet Initiative (opennet.net), which researches and documents state filtering and censorship practices, was blocked.

  8. Italian Tunisians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Tunisians

    The secretary of state of the Bey, today we would say the prime minister of the time, was often an Italian. In 1859 the trade convention between the Bey of Tunis and the consul general of Austria, Giovanni Gasparo Merlato, had been written in Italian; that is no wonder, since in the Austrian Empire as a federal entity, the official language for ...

  9. Tunisians in France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunisians_in_France

    Tunisians in France are people of Tunisian descent living in France.People of Tunisian origin account for a large sector of the total population in France. Following France's colonial rule in Tunisia from 1881 to 1956, many Tunisians chose to immigrate to France from the 1960s to the present due to France's favorable economic conditions, while others sought to escape Tunisia's relatively ...