Slovenia: A little (currently border disputes with Croatia).
Croatia: A lot
Macedonia: None
Bosnia and Herzegovina: A tiny bit (which actually breaks Croatia into two parts, so that the area around the town of Dubrovnik is technically an exclave).
Albania, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo, Macedonia, Serbia, Slovenia
The Balkan countries are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia. A coastline is another word for a coast or border with the sea, so this question asks which of the Balkan countries are landlocked. Most of these countries border either the Aegean Sea, the Ionian Sea, the Adriatic Sea or the Black Sea. However, both Macedonia and Serbia are fully landlocked with no coastline.
It is not. It has 24 km of coast on adriatic at the south of country.
The former country of Yugoslavia has been divided up into the several smaller independent nations of Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia. The nations of Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina all border the Adriatic Sea.
Eastern Adriatic coast.
Yugoslavia doesn't exist no more. There are Croatia, Serbia, Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Montenegro and Kosovo now. Between Slovakia and countries of former Yugoslavia is Hungary.
The European country that neighbors both Yugoslavia (now Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and North Macedonia) and Greece while also touching the Mediterranean Sea is Albania. It lies to the northwest of Greece and has a coastline along the Adriatic Sea and the Ionian Sea, both of which are part of the Mediterranean.
Slovenia
Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia, Croatia.
At the end of WWII, Yugoslavia was separated into six separate countries: Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro, and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). All six are separated from Italy by the Adriatic Sea.
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
They extend for almost 700 miles in a crescent shape from the coastline of southern France (near Monaco) into Switzerland, then through northern Italy and into Austria, and down through Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro - then ending in Albania on the rugged coastline of the Adriatic Sea.