If he was born in Croatia inside Yugoslavia, that makes him Croat thus making you also a Croat!
Yugoslavian is the proper adjective for Yugoslavia.
The Serbo-Croatian language is called "Serbo-Croatian" in English. It is a term that encompasses various dialects and standard forms of the Shtokavian dialect spoken in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro.
The Croatian War of Independence was a war fought in Croatia from 1991 to 1995. It was fought between the Croatian government, having declared independence from theSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and both the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and Serb forces, who established the self-proclaimed Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) within Croatia. The war was fought on Croatian land.
Most recently, Croatia became independent upon the collapse of the Communist Yugoslavian government in 1991. Their war for independence from the Serbs continued until 1995. The Croatian people and culture do have a long history dating back to the 7th Century, though.
No, Ana Vidovic is not Italian. She is a Croatian classical guitarist.
Yugoslavia does not exist. Croatia was part of that country.
Croatian
Hrvatska
The national language of Croatia is Croatian, also often called Serbo-Croatian. The Croatian name for the language is "Hrvatski". French is not a commonly-spoken language in Croatia.
Croatia was part of Yugoslavia till the early 1990s. (Slovakia is to the north of Hungary).
HR is the offical abbriviation for Croatia. HR = HRVATSKA which is Croatia on Croatian
In Croatia