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Definition of Slovakia
1. Noun. A landlocked republic in central Europe; separated from the Czech Republic in 1993.
Generic synonyms: European Country, European Nation
Terms within: Bratislava, Capital Of Slovakia, Pozsony, Pressburg, Carpathian Mountains, Carpathians
Group relationships: Europe
Member holonyms: Slovak
Derivative terms: Slovakian
Definition of Slovakia
1. Proper noun. Country in Central Europe. Official name: Slovak Republic. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Medical Definition of Slovakia
1. Created 1 january 1993 as a result of the division of czechoslovakia into the czech republic and slovakia. (12 Dec 1998)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Slovakia
Literary usage of Slovakia
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Social Welfare Forum: Official Proceedings ... Annual Forum by National Conference on Social Welfare, American Social Science Association, Conference of Charities (U.S., Conference of Charities (U.S.), National Conference of Social Work (U.S. (1921)
"Czecho-Slovakia has inherited this problem from the former Austro- Hungarian ...
Hungary left Czecho-Slovakia two emigration laws, one of the year 1903, ..."
2. Environmental Performance Reviews by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. Committee on Environmental Policy (2006)
"Figure 8.1 Development assistance to Slovakia, 2000 Multilateral ... Of this
total assistance to Slovakia the multilateral part was SKK 419 million and the ..."
3. Energy Policies of the Slovak Republic: 1997 Survey by International Energy Agency (1997)
"Bui Slovakia continues to use an amount of energy per unit of GDP that is ...
In 1995 Slovakia was roughly 40% more energy-intensive than Hungary but only ..."
4. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1922)
"A VILLAGE IN LOWER Slovakia BY MARIE-ANNE ... Slovakia was, prior to the revolution
of October 18, 1918, a dependency of the Hungarian Crown. ..."
5. Balkanized Europe: A Study in Political Analysis and Reconstruction by Paul Scott Mowrer (1921)
"Their chief weaknesses are internal, and have to do not only with questions of
interior racial unity, but, in the case of Czecho-Slovakia and Greece, ..."
6. Abraham Lincoln and Constitutional Government by Bartow Adolphus Ulrich (1920)
"When Austria-Hungary collapsed, it resolved itself into its component parts as
follows: Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia (Austrian} and Slovakia countries ..."