The Panjnad River is a river in Punjab, Pakistan and a tributary of the Indus River. This article details the eastern Pakistani province of Punjab. ... A tributary (or affluent or confluent) is a contributory stream, a river that does not reach the sea, but joins another major river (a parent river), to which it contributes its waters, swelling its discharge. ... The Indus (Sindh nadi), known as the Sindhu in Sanskrit, Sinthos in Greek, and Sindus in Latin, is the principal river of Pakistan. ...
Punjnad is a place in Punjab province where five rivers of pakistan meet.
PanjnadRiver (Urdu: پنجند) (panj = five, nadi = river) is a river in Punjab, Pakistan.
PanjnadRiver is formed by successive confluence of the five rivers of Punjab, namely Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej.
Beyond the confluence of Indus and Panjnadrivers, the Indus river was known as Satnad (Sat = seven) carrying the waters of seven rivers including Indus river, Kabul river and the five rivers of Punjab.
The Chenab River (Punjabi: ਚਨਾਬ, canāb, Urdu: چناب, literally 'Moon(Chen) River(ab)') is formed by the confluence of the Chandra and Bhaga rivers at Tandi located in the upper Himalayas, in the Lahaul District of Himachal Pradesh, India.
The river was known to Indians in Vedic period as Ashkini or Iskmati and as Acesines to the Ancient Greeks.
It is the iconic river around which Punjabi consciousness revolves, and plays a prominent part in the tale of Heer Ranjha, the Punjabi national epic.