The Brahmaputra river is known as 'Tsang Po' in Tibet and 'Jamuna' in Bangladesh.
Brahmaputra:-
'The Brahmaputra' in Sanskrit means 'son of Brahma'.
It is a trans-boundary river that flows through China, India, and Bangladesh.
It originates in the Manasarovar Lake, near Mount Kailash in Tibet, as the Yarlung Tsangpo (‘the purifier’) river.
It flows in the southwest direction through the Assam Valley as the Brahmaputra and in the south direction through Bangladesh as the Jamuna.
It merges with Ganga (also known as the Padma River) in Bangladesh.
It finally drains into the Bay of Bengal.
The Brahmaputra River is the largest river of India-volume-wise whereas lengthwise the Ganga is the longest river of India.
The Brahmaputra forms the largest number of freshwater riverine islands in the world and among this, Majuli is the largest freshwater riverine island in the world.
National Waterway 2 (NW2) is 891 km long, of which the Sadiya-Dhubri stretch is built on the Brahmaputra River in Assam.