The 6 parts were: Slovenia Croatia Bosnia Hercegovina Serbia Montenegro Macedonia Within Serbia there were also 2 provinces called Voyvodina and Kosovo.
Slovenia, Croatia, Boznia-Hertzegovina, Montenegro, Serbia and Macedonia were parts of Yugoslavia.
In parts of Yugoslavia where Serbs were prevalent (Kosovo, Serbia, serbian republic in bosnia) military targets
Yugoslavia.
They once made up the Republic of Yugoslavia, but now they are independent countries.
Slovenia and Croatia declared their independence from Serbian-dominated Yugoslavia in 1991. Bosnia and Herzegovina also declared independence in 1992.
The state of Yugoslavia started to break up in 1991 and ceased to exist about a year later. So to fly from Yugoslavia to Austria would require travelling across time rather than a country. You can fly from parts of what was formerly Yugoslavia to Austria without crossing any other country.
No, Yugoslavia is not Armenian, Yugoslavia is Slavic.
The 6 parts were: Slovenia Croatia Bosnia Hercegovina Serbia Montenegro Macedonia Within Serbia there were also 2 provinces called Voyvodina and Kosovo.
Yugoslavis was a country which existed until around 2003 when the final parts (Serbia and Montenegro) became independent.
No, Slovakia was about half of Czechoslovakia. You are thinking of Slovenia, which was one of the many parts of Yugoslavia.
Germany! I presume you mean in WWII. Germany occupied parts of France, Italy, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Greece, and possibly others I have forgotten.
Slovenia is known as Slovenia to English speakers. To people from Slovenia and other parts of former Yugoslavia it is known as Slovenija.