Crossword clues for montenegrin
montenegrin
Wikipedia
Montenegrin may refer to:
- adjective for anything related to Montenegro
- demonym referring to the people of Montenegro, see Demographics of Montenegro.
- Montenegrins, the ethnic group associated with Montenegro
- Montenegrin language, a modern Slavic language spoken by ethnic Montenegrins
Usage examples of "montenegrin".
In the Balkans the boundary between the two stretched from the Montenegrin coast up the river Drina to the confluence of the Sava and the Danube, and then further north.
The Serbian and Montenegrin delegations demanded that the Congress continue working without the Slovenes, but the others did not agree.
JNA officers kept the Serbian and Montenegrin representatives in the Presidency informed of their plans and consulted no one else.
Serbian and Montenegrin officers were thrown out of the army because they sympathised with Stalin.
Greater Serbia with a suitable port, the attack on Dubrovnik was also motivated by the long-standing urge of the Hercegovinian and Montenegrin mountain dwellers to make this beautiful city Serbian.
Most of the invaders were Montenegrin, and almost the whole neighbourhood immediate surrounding Dubrovnik was plundered and set on fire.
Even the state approved this criminal behaviour -- in the first days of the aggression Montenegrin television included in its news an appeal by Montenegrin school hostels to be sent several hundred pairs of trainers from the Dubrovnik area.
Vukodlak: The Montenegrin Vukodlak can turn into a wolf and only goes out in the full moon.
He was a Montenegrin peasant and he got his start in coffee, the Piraeus, 1849.
It rose over the Montenegrin heights, and for a while the far coast remained sombre though the zenith was already a brilliant, quite light blue.
In the north-west the Austrians were pressing on from Ushitza down by the Montenegrin frontier towards Mitrovitza, threatening to crush the Serbians on the Kossovo plateau between them and the Bulgars.
Suddenly Serbian and Montenegrin vacationers, including many college students, began to beat them up.
With the completely washed out Serbian uniforms mixed the brilliant colors of those of the Montenegrin guard.
A bolt was slipped back, and then a tall Montenegrin, belted and armed with knife and big revolver, blocked up the doorway.
And I had been, both before and after the terrible shelling in 1991 from the Serbian and Montenegrin forces during the Balkan conflict.