How to use in-sentence of “croatian”:
+ Actually they are only one hundred in Croatian Split, with their association called “Comunitá italiana di Spalato”.
+ A Croatian student named “Tomislav Uzelac” developed “AMP MP3 Playback Engine” in 1997.
+ He was a well known corresponding member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
+ Igor Tudor is a former Croatian football player.
+ In the foreword, young Starčević elaborated his linguistic ideas, pointing out that the mixture of all three Croatian dialects and the Krajina dialect is called the Croatian language, which Starčević considers from the perspective of its six hundred years of history.

Example sentences of “croatian”:
+ Petar Stipetić was a Croatian general.
+ Božo Bakota was a Croatian footballer.
+ Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer proposed the founding of a University to the Croatian Parliament in 1861.
+ A group of Croatian terrorists made up of Zvonko and his wife, Julienne Bušić, Petar Matanić, Frane Pešut and Slobodan Vlašić hijacked a commercial Trans World Airlines plane on September 10, 1976.
+ One of the goals of the Croatian Liberation Movement is to re-establish the state of Croatia with the borders it had during the Second World War.
+ Davor Šuker is a former Croatian football player.
+ Milko Kelemen was a Croatian composer.
+ Mirela Bareš is a Croatian national volleyball player.
+ Ivan Klasnić is a Croatian football player.
+ His clients are mostly present in the field of culture and civil-society scene: Multimedia Institute,, SKD Prosvjeta, British Council, the initiative, for which he designs catalogues, books, promotional materials, campaigns, etc.”In parallel with the increased engagement, Arkzin’s graphic editors publicly thematized the social responsibility of art and design, reaffirming some of the repressed names of Croatian engaged design, such as Mirko Ilić and Matko Meštrović.
+ Mladen Mladenović is a former Croatian football player.
+ The separatism-prone Croatian clergy forced Croatian Sokols to leave the “Yugoslav Sokol Alliance” in 1919–20, fueling internal conflicts within the Alliance on political grounds.
+ He translated many works of various authors into the Croatian language, like Walt Whitman, Marcel Proust and Joseph Conrad.
+ Petar Stipetić was a Croatian general.
+ Božo Bakota was a Croatian footballer.
+ Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer proposed the founding of a University to the Croatian Parliament in 1861.
More in-sentence examples of “croatian”:
+ In the 2009–10 Croatian presidential election2009–10 election, Bandić unsuccessfully ran for President of Croatia.
+ Zlatko Škorić was a Croatian footballer.
+ In the next stage, Airoldi planned to run along the Croatian coast through Kotor and Corfu.
+ In 2007, Efraim Zuroff reported in the “Jerusalem Post” that during a performance by Marko Perković of the Croatian band Thompson, helping to create an air of discomfort among Croatia’s minorities in the region at the time.
+ Its brutal repression of Yugoslav PartisansPartisan activities and the killing and imprisonment of thousands of Yugoslav civilians in concentration camps in the newly annexed provinces, and in Italy proper, fed the anti-Italian sentiments of the Slovenian and Croatian subjects of Fascist Italy.
+ As of 2020, three currencies participate in ERM II: the Danish krone, the Croatian kuna and the Bulgarian lev.
+ He played from 1996 till 2009 for the Croatian national team.
+ The movement’s demands were initially around the exclusion of the use of the Serbian language and the exclusive use of the Croatian language in Croatia, declaration of Croatia as a national state of Croats and Croatia as a successor to the medieval Croatian kingdom.
+ Andrej Panadić is a former Croatian football player.
+ They did more to promote the Croatian cause than anyone else”.
+ The Ustasha ideological system was just a replica of the traditional pure Croatian nationalism of Ante Starcevic.
+ The same destiny faced Franjo Rački, Ante Trumbić, and Stjepan Radić – three Croatian politicians advocating actively and fighting for the Yugoslavism – as a common denominator of togetherness and life among the Slavic people of the kingdom of Yugoslavia.
+ Before 1992, Croatian Sportspersonathletes competed for Yugoslavia at the Olympics.
+ Until the beginning of 1920 the Italians of Spalato never attacked the Slavs and were harassed by Croatian nationalists continuously, as has happened since the end of the XIX century in all Dalmatia.
+ Expulsion of the Croatian and Slovene clergy from these lands and their replacement by the Italians was received with silence and accepted without resistance or protest among their Catholic brethren in Yugoslavia.
+ In late 2004 the Croatian government ordered the removal of the memorial plaque in Slunj.
+ Stipe Pletikosa is a Croatian football player.
+ Julienne Bušić was appointed by President Franjo Tudjman to the diplomatic post of adviser to the Croatian ambassador to the United States.
+ The Croatian language consists of three Dialectvernaculars.
+ Vladko Maček the head of the Croatian Peasant Party, the strongest elected party in Croatia at the time, refused an offer from Germans to head the government but called on people to obey to and cooperate with the new government the same day Kvaternik made the proclamation.
+ Vjekoslav Vojo Radoičić, also known as Vojo Radoičić, was a Croatian painter, sculptor, printmaker, and stage designer.
+ Duje Bonačić was a Croatian rower.
+ Augustin “Tin” Ujević was a Croatian poet, considered one of the most important poets in Croatian language of all time.
+ In 2018 Krupa has become the first living Croatian artist to be included on Ranker’s list of famous painters.
+ In cooperation with, another Croatian undergound music label, Arkzin released one more music CD in 2000.
+ Despite Pavelić’s assurances of equality with the Croats, many Muslims quickly became dissatisfied with Croatian rule.
+ Bonaventura Duda was a Croatian theologian and biblical scholar.
+ He served as a representative in the Croatian Parliament representing the X electoral district from 22 December 2011 through 28 December 2015.
+ Milan Bandić was a Croatian politician.
+ His critical review of Đurđević’s “Pjesni razlike” was described by the Croatian literary historian Branko Vodnik as “our first genuine literary essay about older Dubrovnik literature”.
+ The opera was performed as part of the 2013/2014 season at the Croatian National Theatre, in Split.
+ The National Olympic Committee for Croatia is the Croatian Olympic Committee.
+ Novak demonstrated that even the anti-Croatian activities in the Italian Croatian and Slovene lands were not counteracted by the Croatian and Slovene Roman Catholic clergy in Yugoslavia.
+ The most prominent among them was Frano Ivanišević, a national fighter and promoter of Old Slavonic Church language as the language of liturgy in the Croatian Catholic Church.
+ He was a member of the Croatian Social Liberal Party and served as the party’s president from 1989 through 1990.
+ The border, he argued, was defined according to both Croatian and Serbian border claims and did not interfere with any other state’s sovereignty.
+ Zdravko Tomac was a Croatian politician.
+ He was one of the founders of the Croatian Democratic Union and served as the Croatian Minister of Interior during the Croatian War of Independence.
+ In these centuries, the Venetian language became the “lingua franca” of all Dalmatia, assimilating the Dalmatian language of the Romanised Illyrians and influencing partially the coastal Croatian language and the Albanian language.
+ In March 2020, a cluster of cases were reported in numerous Croatian cities.
+ Infighting over the failure to establish a Croatian state also fragmented the surviving Ustaše.
+ He currently plays for Inter Milan and the Croatian national team.
+ He was one of the few Croatian musicians who has performed at major locations such as Carnegie Hall, Royal Albert Hall, Olympia and Sydney Opera House.
+ Luka Modrić is a Croatian Association footballfootball player who plays as a Real Madrid and is the captain of the Croatia national team.
+ Ana Konjuh is a Croatian tennis player.
+ In the 2009–10 Croatian presidential election2009–10 election, Bandić unsuccessfully ran for President of Croatia.
+ Zlatko Škorić was a Croatian footballer.
