6 countries: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Serbia, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM).
Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia are the countries that were once a part of Yugoslavia.
Bosnia isn't the true Yugoslavia, Yugoslavia consisted of many countries such as Serbia, Croatia, and Montenegro (there are more).
The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia are such countries.
Croatia didn't split
To answer your question, it's Hungary. Btw Yugoslavia doesn't exist anymore. It split up in more smaller countries.
Yugoslavia no longer exists. It has been split up into a number of countries, including Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro and others. Each country is different.
Split is town in Croatia.
This is the first time 'Serbia' has been in the World Cup. 'Serbia & Montenegro' were in World Cup 2006, and Yugoslavia (after the old Yugoslavia has already split to a number of new countries) was in 1998.
Yemen is the only current country that begins with the letter Y. It does not end with the letter a. Yugoslavia was a country in southeast Europe during part of the 20th century.
No. Yugoslavia is not a city. Yugoslavia is a country that no longers exists. Czechoslovakia is a country that no longer exists. It split into two countries. They are the Czech Republic, whose capital is Prague, and Slovakia, whose capital is Bratislava.
Four republics peacefully gained independence
Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia declared independence in 1991 while Serbia and Montenegro (officially one country) formed in 1992. Montenegro got its independence in 2006 from Serbia. They are now 2 separate countries which means Yugoslavia was made up of 6 different countries.
There is no country today called Yugoslavia . Federative Yugolslavia split into many new nations. Serbia was the last country to split from Yugoslavia. Bulgaria and Serbia are neighbours, their languages are very similar (the Slavic group of languages), they have similar traditions and their foods are alike.