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Definition of Jugoslavian
1. Noun. A native or inhabitant of Yugoslavia.
Group relationships: Federal Republic Of Yugoslavia, Jugoslavija, Serbia And Montenegro, Union Of Serbia And Montenegro, Yugoslavia
Generic synonyms: European
Derivative terms: Yugoslav, Yugoslavian
Definition of Jugoslavian
1. Adjective. (dated form of Yugoslavian) ¹
2. Noun. (dated form of Yugoslavian) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jugoslavian
Literary usage of Jugoslavian
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New Constitutions of Europe by Howard Lee McBain, Lindsay Rogers (1922)
"... and the requirement of the constitution to this end was met by electoral laws
of July 20, 1920.6 The Jugoslavian electoral law of September 3, 1920, ..."
2. Preliminary Economic Studies of the War by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Division of Economics and History, Thomas Nixon Carver (1922)
"... because on the conversion of the currency from Austrian to Jugoslavian many
of the more ignorant peasants failed to realize the necessity of getting ..."
3. The Cooperative Movement in Jugoslavia, Rumania and North Italy During and by Diarmid Coffey (1922)
"... because on the conversion of the currency from Austrian to Jugoslavian many
of the more ignorant peasants failed to realize the necessity of getting ..."
4. The Strategic Value of Fossil Fuels: Challenges and Responses : Conference by International Energy Agency (1996)
"Hungary has oil pipe line connection to the Adriatic, but it is not in service
because of the Jugoslavian war. The Hungarian gas system will be privatized ..."
5. The Peace Tangle by John Foster Bass (1920)
"In the meantime, as the railroads from Trieste and Fiume to the northwest pass
through Jugoslavian territory, the latter can and do establish frontier ..."
6. Japanese Intervention in the Russian Far East by Dalʹnevostochnai︠a︡ Respublika (1922)
"Together with the Czechs were also leaving Roumanian Latvian and Jugoslavian troops.
xvm. While the new democratic authorities were endeavoring to do ..."
7. The Boys' Book of the World War by Francis William Rolt-Wheeler (1920)
"A Mid-European Union was formed, also in Philadelphia, on October 26, 1918, in
which Czecho-Slovak, Polish, Jugoslavian, ..."