Use in sentence of “yugoslavian”

How to use in-sentence of “yugoslavian”:

+ Additionally, he was honored with the Award of the Yugoslavian Radio-Television, the state’s highest award for the arts.

+ The Kosovo Liberation Army fought the Yugoslavian army from 1998 to 1999.

+ Stefanovic was the chair of the committee in numerous Yugoslavian and international competitions.

+ He has played for the Yugoslavian national team and Macedonian national team.

+ Apart from former Yugoslavian countrycountries, this aircraft was sold to Sudan.

+ Josip Nikolai Peruzović better known by his ring name, Nikolai Volkoff, was a Yugoslavian professional wrestler who was best known for wrestling with World Wrestling Federation.

+ Furthermore there were in the Governatorato 10000 Italians who took the Yugoslav citizenship after WWI, in order to remain there and be accepted without problems by the new Yugoslavian regime after the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Use in sentence of yugoslavian
Use in sentence of yugoslavian

Example sentences of “yugoslavian”:

+ He played in the Yugoslavian heavy metal band Metro Metro, pop-folk band ‘Ljute papričice’ and was a member of The No Smoking Orchestra.

+ From 1920 Olympics1920 to the athletes were part of the Yugoslavian team.

+ In 1945, the new Yugoslavian government, led by Tito, paid for a report by the National Committee of Croatia.

+ Indeed, following the Treaty of Rapallo, the Italians of Dalmatia could opt for the acquisition of Italian citizenship instead of the Yugoslavian one, while maintaining residence: despite a violent campaign of intimidation on the part of Yugoslavia, over 900 families of Italian speaking “Spalatini” had exercised the option to be Italians.

+ Fahrudin Jusufi was a Yugoslavian footballer.

+ As a soloist, member of various chamber groups and orchestras, he collaborated with distinguished Yugoslavian and international artists, including: Herbert von Karajan, Lorin Maazel, Leopold Stokowski, Kirill Kondrashin, Bernard Keeffe, Oivin Fjeldstad, Francesco Mander, Jerzy Katlewicz, Jovan Sajnovic, Uros Lajovic, Anton Kolar, Anton Nanut, Petr Vronsky, Zbigniew Chwedczuk, Oskar Danon, Dusan Skovran, Josef Daniel, Zivojin Zdravkovic, Julio Maric, Franc Klinar, Roman Skrepek, Aleksandar Pavlovic, Vanco Cavdarski, Bogo Leskovic, Djura Jaksic, Mladen Jagust, Aleksandar Lekovski, Bogdan Babic, Vojislav Simic, Eric Hope, Evgeni Korolyov, Michel Dussault, Andreja Preger, Viktor Jakovcic, Freddy Dosek, Zorica Dimitrijevic-Stosic, Mirjana Krsljanin, The Zagreb Soloists, The Belgrade Trio, The Serbian String Quartet, The Zagreb Quartet and many others.

+ He was a member of the Yugoslavian national team from 1995 to 2003, Serbia and Montenegro from 2003 to 2006 and Serbia from 2006 to 2010.

+ He played in the Yugoslavian heavy metal band Metro Metro, pop-folk band 'Ljute papričice' and was a member of The No Smoking Orchestra.

+ From 1920 Olympics1920 to the athletes were part of the Yugoslavian team.
+ In 1945, the new Yugoslavian government, led by Tito, paid for a report by the National Committee of Croatia.

+ In spring 1941 the Greek and Yugoslavian navy were destroyed and/or made captive by the Italians during the Italo-German war in the western Balkans against Greece and Yugoslavia.

+ The 12th Naval Infantry Brigade of the Yugoslavian Navy consisted of 900 to 2,000 men in three battalions.

+ Anto Drobnjak is a former Yugoslavian football player.

+ After World War I Temerin became part of Yugoslavian state.

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