Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fibraurea tinctoria is a species of flowering plant [2] native to South Asia, where it grows in wet tropical areas between India and the Philippines. [1] It is considered locally common. [3]
It has many common names which include duruka, tebu telor, PNG/Fiji asparagus, dule (Fiji), pitpit (Melanesia/New Guinea) and naviso. The young, unopened flower heads of Saccharum edule are eaten raw, steamed, or toasted, and prepared in various ways in Southeastern Asia, including New Guinea, Fiji and certain island communities of Indonesia .
The word Tebu can refer to the Tubu people in Chad, Niger and Libya the Tebu languages spoken by the Tubu people; Tebu is also a name for sugar cane in Indonesia; TEBU Abrv. in railroad terminology, a "Tractive Effort Booster Unit", or Slug; Teerbedrijf Uithoorn (TEBU), Dutch coal tar processing company; Tebu mountain, high point in Apetina ...
Tebu Community is an indigenous Itsekiri rural community of the Warri Kingdom in Nigeria. Tebu Community was founded by Ifie and Eyengho who are the children of Uwankun and Otete. It is located along the creek of Olero, Benin River in Warri North Local Government Area of present-day Delta State.
Tebu is a small family of two Saharan languages, consisting of Daza and Teda. It is spoken by the two groups of Toubou people, the Daza and Teda. Tebu is predominantly spoken in Chad and in southern Libya by around 580,000 people. Daza and Teda have an estimated 537,000 and 42,500 speakers, respectively. [1]