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Hrvatski enciklopedijski rječnik, by a group of authors Hrvatska gramatika by Eugenija Barić et al. Also notable are the recommendations of Matica hrvatska , the national publisher and promoter of Croatian heritage, and the Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography , as well as the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts .
[8] Other major works by Anić are Pravopisni priručnik hrvatskoga jezika (first published as Pravopisni priručnik hrvatskoga ili srpskoga jezika in 1986), an orthographic manual coauthored with Josip Silić [ hr ] , [ 2 ] and Rječnik stranih riječi (1999), a dictionary of loanwords in Croatian, coauthored with Ivo Goldstein .
ožujka 2018. for 17 March 2018) or represented by an Arabic or Roman ordinal number (17. 3. 2018., 17. III. 2018.). Ordinal numbers are always followed by a full stop and separated by spaces. The genitive case is used for the month name (implies e.g. 17. [dan] ožujka "the 17th [day] of March"), but the nominative case (e.g. 17. ožujak 2018.
Front cover of Srpski rječnik, first edition.. Srpski rječnik (Serbian Cyrillic: Српски рјечник, pronounced [sr̩̂pskiː rjê̞ːtʃniːk], The Serbian Dictionary; full name: Српски рјечник истолкован њемачким и латинским ријечма, "The Serbian Dictionary, paralleled with German and Latin words") is a dictionary written by Vuk ...
The word hrvatski is also used to refer to the Croatian language, whereas Hrvatska (first letter capital) is the native name for Croatia, the country. As such, all four forms ( hrvatski , hrvatska , hrvatske and hrvatsko ) commonly appear in native names of many Croatian government institutions, companies, political parties, organisations and ...
Dictionary of the Khazars: A Lexicon Novel (Serbian Cyrillic: Хазарски речник, Hazarski rečnik) is the first novel by Serbian writer Milorad Pavić, published in 1984.
Croatia was in Group I of UEFA's World Cup qualifications.They played alongside Iceland, Ukraine, Turkey, Finland and Kosovo.Croatia finished as runner-up in the group and entered the second-round play-offs where the team beat Greece and qualified for the 2018 FIFA World Cup.
The Croatian National Resistance (Croatian: Hrvatski narodni otpor, HNO; Spanish: Resistencia Nacional Croata), also referred to as Otpor, was an Ustaša organization founded in 1955 in Spain. [1] The HNO ran an armed organisation, Drina, which continued to be active well into the 1970s.