There is no country called Yugoslavia.
But in the countries that now are there, you say Bok, Dobar Dan or Cao
yes you can say Yugoslavian anytime most eduacted people will know what you mean the capitol is still Belgrade. I traveled all over yugslavia during the 80's as a California ;-) but I lived in Austria at the time so it was easy!
The deepest and oldest national rivalry in Yugoslavia was the one between the Serbs and Croats, who despite their shared language possessed different social and value systems and political cultures. Two sayings illustrated these animosities and the essential difference in the inherited political styles of both peoples. The first says: "The very way of life of a Serb and Croat is a deliberate provocation by each to the other." The second, a self-complimentary Serbian stereotype, holds that in a conflict with authority "the Serb reaches for the sword and the Croat for his pen." The Serbian stereotype refers to the tradition of the hajduk, the idealized mountain renegade who responded violently to the oppressive anarchy of the Ottoman Empire during its last two centuries; the Croatian stereotype reflects the cultural influence of responding through the legal system to the Habsburgs' highly bureaucratized infringements on national and individual freedoms in Croatia.
There are 6 regions:Socialist Republic Of SloveniaSocialist Republic Of Bosnia & HerzegovinaSocialist republic Of CroatiaSocialist Reblic Of MacedoniaSocialist Repblic Of Serbia -with two provinces Kosovo & VojvodinaSocialist reblic Of MontenegroYou can say ''dobar dan'' (good day) or ''zdravo'' and ''ćao''.or halo.
There is no such language as "Yugoslavian." Please specify: Bosnian, Macedonian, Croatian, Serbian, or Slovene.
there are quite a few different ways to say hi in bih here are some of them-:- - Merhaba - Cao - halo
Zdravo
pronounce: zdrah-vo
In Bosnian "hello" is "zdravo".
Zdravo
You say "hello" in English.
Say Hello to Rosita!
halito is how you say hello and how to say hello how are you is Halito, Chim Achukma?
In Filipino, you say "hello" as "kamusta."
This is how you say hello in Turkish: Merhaba = Hello
Crocodiles do NOT say hello.
In Neapolitan, you say "ciao" to say hello.
hello hello
hello same hello
Irankarapte - Hello
Chikma (Hello) Chikma chin chikma (hello, how are you?)
In Tunisian, you can say "Marhaba" to say hello.