. . . . "Tamir Gol"@en . . . . . . "Tamir River" . . . . . "The Tamir (Mongolian: \u0422\u0430\u043C\u0438\u0440 \u0433\u043E\u043B) is a river flowing through the valleys of the Khangai Mountains in the Arkhangai aimag of central Mongolia.For most of its length, the Tamir is divided into two branches, the Northern Tamir (\u0425\u043E\u0439\u0442 \u0422\u0430\u043C\u0438\u0440 \u0433\u043E\u043B, Khoit Tamir gol) and the Southern Tamir (\u0423\u0440\u0434 \u0422\u0430\u043C\u0438\u0440 \u0433\u043E\u043B, Urd Tamir gol).The Northern Tamir starts between the Shalkhagiin Khoit mountain range and the Togoo Mountain in the Ikh-Tamir sum.The southern Tamir starts about 25 km to the south-west in the Bulgan sum at the end of the Khairkhny mountain range.The two branches run a roughly north-eastern course up to their confluence at the sum center of Battsengel sum.The Tamir is a main tributary of the Orkhon River, which it meets in \u00D6gii Nuur sum, opposite to the namesake \u00D6gii Lake."@en . .