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A native or inhabitant of Bulgaria
Answer for the clue "A native or inhabitant of Bulgaria ", 9 letters:
bulgarian
Alternative clues for the word bulgarian
Word definitions for bulgarian in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Relating to Bulgaria, its people(,) or the Bulgarian language. n. A native of Bulgaria. n. The official language of Bulgaria.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1550s, from Bulgaria + -ian .
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Bulgarian refers to anything of or relating to Bulgaria and may refer directly to: Bulgarians , a Slavic-speaking ethnic group Bulgaria Bulgarian language , a Slavic language A citizen of Bulgaria. See also Demographics of Bulgaria and Culture of Bulgaria ...
Usage examples of bulgarian.
Proud of his victory and his royal prize, the Bulgarian advanced to relieve Adrianople and achieve the destruction of the Latins.
Bulgarian church in the 1220s, is located near the center of the Athonite peninsula.
On the printing press, uncounted sums of Bulgarian leva and Rumanian bani and Turkish paras, all of it apparently worth something somewhere.
About seventy-five percent of the population is Ukrainian, twenty percent are Russian, the rest are Jews, Byelorussians, Moldovans, Poles, Armenians, Greeks and Bulgarians.
Jugoslav, Czechoslovak, Bulgarian, German, and English whose books and reports I have studied.
It is widely believed that the KGB, using its puppets in Bulgarian intelligence, tried to kill Pope John Paul II in 1983 because of his support for grassroots opposition movements in his native Poland.
The Paulicians of Thrace resisted the storms of persecution, maintained a secret correspondence with their Armenian brethren, and gave aid and comfort to their preachers, who solicited, not without success, the infant faith of the Bulgarians.
Bulgarian tsars and saints, rebukes his fellow-countrymen for allowing themselves to be called Greeks, and denounces the arbitrary proceedings of the Phanariot prelates.
If the ambassadors were instructed by any false brethren in the Byzantine history, they might produce three memorable examples of the violation of this imaginary law: the marriage of Leo, or rather of his father Constantine the Fourth, with the daughter of the king of the Chozars, the nuptials of the granddaughter of Romanus with a Bulgarian prince, and the union of Bertha of France or Italy with young Romanus, the son of Constantine Porphyrogenitus himself.
It is based on some Bulgarian dialect from around Salonika, elevated to the rank of a liturgic and literary language in the ninth century by the apostles of Slavdom, SS.
Ignatiev, like the Slavophil he was, and like all official Russia, took the side of the Bulgarians because they were Slavs.
She began solving Serbo-Croatian codes, then some Bulgarian, then helped with others.
Not a trace of the Ugrian or Finnish element is to be found in the Bulgarian speech.
Both of the unenciphered War Department telegraph codes were read by the Germans, and Hungary received photostats of War Department Confidential Code Number 2, probably from the Bulgarians.
Some of the leaders went so far as to open negotiations with Rome, and an archbishop of the Uniate Bulgarian church was nominated by the pope.