"The Salween (Burmese: \u101E\u1036\u101C\u103D\u1004\u103A\u1019\u103C\u1005\u103A, IPA: [\u03B8\u00E0\u0274lw\u026A\u0300\u0274 mj\u026A\u0294], also spelt Thanlwin; Mon: \u101E\u102C\u1014\u103A\u101C\u102C\u1014\u103A, [san lon]; Tibetan: \u0F62\u0F92\u0FB1\u0F63\u0F0B\u0F58\u0F7C\u0F0B\u0F62\u0F94\u0F74\u0F63\u0F0B\u0F46\u0F74\u0F0D, Wylie: rGyl mo rNGul chu, Gyalmo Ngulchu; Chinese: \u6012\u6C5F; pinyin: N\u00F9 Ji\u0101ng, literally \"Angry River\" in Chinese \u2014the river is actually named after the Nu people living in the area, but Chinese having no phonetic script had to use a character with a similar sound as Nu which happens to be the character for rage; Shan and Thai IPA: [m\u025B\u0302\u02D0 n\u00E1\u02D0m s\u01CE\u02D0la.win], Mae Nam Salawin (Thai: \u0E41\u0E21\u0E48\u0E19\u0E49\u0E33\u0E2A\u0E32\u0E25\u0E30\u0E27\u0E34\u0E19); is a river, about 2,815 kilometres (1,749 mi) long, that flows from the Tibetan Plateau into the Andaman Sea in Southeast Asia. "@en . . "0.0"^^ . . "Nujiang" . . . . . "4978.0"^^ . . . "Salween"@en . . . . . . "5350.0"^^ . .