How to use in-sentence of “serbian”:
+ The Ustaše regime had sent large amounts of gold that it had plundered from Serbian and Jewish property owners during WWII into Swiss banks.
+ Ranko Popović is a former Serbian football player.
+ Ilija Petković was a Serbian footballer and manager.
+ After, Milivojev turned towards the Faculty of Philology of Belgrade University, where he is a successful student of the Serbian Language and Literature.
+ Danijel Ljuboja, is a Serbian football forward who plays for Legia Warsaw.
+ Once the Ottomans conquered Serbia, they got rid of the Serbian upper class.

Example sentences of “serbian”:
+ Once resolution was passed, he retreated but also managed to hold on to North Kosovo whose area is 1200KM2 or 11%, where 96% of its population is Serbian whose religion is Christian.
+ His poetic achievements have been introduced to Belgrade audience twice, in Ethnographic Museum, in collaboration with famous Serbian artists.
+ 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.
+ Following the breakthrough on the Thessaloniki Front he was promoted to fourth Serbian Field Marshal.
+ Since then, many Serbian American organizations have been formed in the United States.
+ In order to consolate Croatian nationalists, Broz persecuted Serbian academics who pointed at subordinated position of the Serbian people in Yugoslavia.
+ Dragan Džajić is a former Serbian football player.
+ Dejan Stanković is a Serbian football player.
+ He served as the Serbian member of the presidency of Yugoslavia during the late 1980s and early 1990s.
+ In North Kosovo, Serbian car plates are still used and the Serbian dinar is used as the official currency.
+ Kuzmanović won the 2007 Republika Srpska presidential electionelection against Serbian Democratic Party with 41.33% of the vote.
+ The Battle of Kosovo was a battle between Serbian forces and the Ottoman Empire.
+ Marko Podraščanin is a Serbian volleyball player, a member of Serbia men’s national volleyball team and Italian club Sir Safety Umbria Perugia.
+ Once resolution was passed, he retreated but also managed to hold on to North Kosovo whose area is 1200KM2 or 11%, where 96% of its population is Serbian whose religion is Christian.
+ His poetic achievements have been introduced to Belgrade audience twice, in Ethnographic Museum, in collaboration with famous Serbian artists.
+ 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.
More in-sentence examples of “serbian”:
+ Sara Lozo is a Serbian volleyball player.
+ Petar Omčikus ; October 6, 1926 – April 26, 2019 was a Serbian painter.
+ Sara Lozo is a Serbian volleyball player.
+ Petar Omčikus ; October 6, 1926 – April 26, 2019 was a Serbian painter.
+ Atanasije Jevtić was a Serbian Orthodox prelate.
+ Ivan Miljković is a Serbian volleyball player.
+ This version is used by the Russian Orthodox Church, the Serbian Orthodox Church, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
+ Patriarch Pavle was the 44th Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
+ She spent her first years in the care of Serbian grandparents because her father Albert did not want her to be brought to Switzerland, where he had a job offer at the patent office.
+ The first Serbian uprising in 1804 was led by national hero Karađorđe.
+ It is used in Macedonian and Serbian and pronounced like Spanish ñ in “señor” cf.
+ Maja Aleksić is a Serbian volleyball player.
+ Dragoslav “Dragan” Nikolić was a Serbian actor.
+ The lengths in the table present the overall lengths of the rivers, not just the Serbian parts of the flow.
+ His goal was to keep Kosovo within Serbian parallel structures.
+ Tomislav Nikolić is a Serbian politician, a founder and former leader of Serbian Progressive Party.
+ In the late summer of 1942, the ISC sent tens of thousands of Serbian villagers were to Jasenovac.
+ After the dissolution of Austria-Hungary and the establishment of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes in 1918, and under the leadership of Lazar Car, Croatian Sokol societies were united with Serbian and Slovenian Sokol clubs into a large Sokol Alliance on 15 June 1919.
+ Viktor Troicki is a Serbian professional tennis player.
+ His works have been translated to German, English, Spanish, French, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian and Chinese.
+ Marko Pantelić is a retired Serbian footballer who played as a striker.
+ He was one of the most well-known actors in Serbian cinema.
+ Dušan Čkrebić is a Serbian politician.
+ Because of the Kosovo War in 1999, the Serbian army was kicked out of Kosovo.
+ Igor Duljaj is a Serbian football player.
+ Blazon: The principal field stands for the Serbian State.
+ Jovanka Nikolić was a Serbian author and poet.
+ His full title was “His Holiness the Archbishop of Patriarchal Monastery of PećPeć, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Serbian Patriarch Irinej”.
+ Katarina Lazović is a Serbian volleyball player.
+ The border, he argued, was defined according to both Croatian and Serbian border claims and did not interfere with any other state’s sovereignty.
+ The Serbian Orthodox Church is one of the autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Christian churches.
+ Darko Kovačević is a former Serbian football player.
+ In Serbian sources, “War in Croatia” and “War in Krajina” are used.
+ Some Serbian Americans went back to Serbia to fight in the First Balkan War.
+ He is of ItaliansItalian and Serbian ancestry.
+ The group includes Serbian Americans living in the United States for one or many generations, people who are citizens of both Serbia and the United States, or any other people who say that they are both Serbian and American.
+ Borislav Drljača, better known as Bora Drljača, was a Serbian folk singer.
+ Utopias of Nation: Local Mass Killing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1941-42 by Tomislav Dulić, Uppsala Universitet, 2005 pages 124, 132, 133 Francetić participated personally in arresting and interrogations of prominent Serbian and Jewish leaders Sarajevo u revoluciji: Komunistička partija Jugoslavije u pripremama i organizaciji ustanka by Nisim Albahari, Istorijski arhiv Sarajevo 1977 Page 207 and ordered the murders of some of them.
+ Rade Bogdanović is a former Serbian football player.
+ Dušan “Duško” Popov ; 10 July 1912– 10 August 1981 was a Serbian triple spy agent.
+ Branislav Ivanović is a Serbian footballer.
+ She was born in Kiev to a Serbian father and Russian mother.
+ A number of Serbian American engineers worked on the Apollo program.
+ Ivica Dačić is a Serbian politician.
+ He is a Serbian tennis player.
+ Emina’s 2008 video clip of “Još ti se nadam” is one of the most expensive music videos in Serbian music history.
+ Radomir Naumov was a Serbian politician and engineer.
