Find the word definition

Crossword clues for serbian

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Serbian

1833, from Serb + -ian. As a noun from 1848.

Wikipedia
Serbian

Serbian may refer to:

  • Serbia
  • Serbians, citizens of Serbia
  • Serbs, members of the Serb ethnic group
  • Serbian language, the official language of Serbia
  • Serbian cuisine
  • Serbian diaspora, emigrants of Serbia and their descendants, and Serbs living abroad
Serbian (disambiguation)

Usage examples of "serbian".

For two weeks, the KLA fed in reinforcements, Albanian artillery provided fire support, and NATO warplanes hammered the Serbian positions--to no avail.

In short order, he found work translating Serbian ballads for a prominent professor, who helped him to obtain an instructorship in Slavic languages and literatures at Harvard, the first appointment of its kind in the United States.

On the left wing was massed the powerful Serbian cavalry and the Turkish heavy horse, with the bow-armed Kalmucks behind.

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.

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.

And I had been, both before and after the terrible shelling in 1991 from the Serbian and Montenegrin forces during the Balkan conflict.

Like the Northern Alliance and the Iraqi opposition groups, the KLA was much smaller than the Serbian army, was lightly armed, and largely relied on the NATO air forces to do most of the work in terms of breaking Serb formations.

Albanian army artillery bombardments, but when the KLA finally attacked it was stopped cold by Serbian forces after advancing only a mile or two.

Iraqi air defenses, which could be more troublesome than during Desert Storm, are roughly similar in composition and capability to Serbian air defenses.

On the inability of NATO air forces to do any significant harm to the Serbian ground forces, see Hosmer, ibid., pp.