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Etymologies
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Examples
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A Montenegran official told me of a small valley in Herzogovina where there are still blondes, and they are treated much as the white buffalo in Plains Culture
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Both 12-year-old Adnan Nevic of Bosnia Herzogovina, the sixth billionth baby, and Matej Gaspar from Croatia, who was number five billion, have complained that the UN chose them at birth then largely ignored them.
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Presently, olms are restricted to the Dinaric Karst, a region that extends from the Soca (formerly the Isonzo) River (near Trieste) in SE Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy to the Trebišnica River in eastern Herzogovina.
Archive 2006-03-01 Darren Naish 2006
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In between Italy and Herzogovina, olms also occur in southern Slovenia, southern Croatia and parts of Bosnia.
Archive 2006-03-01 Darren Naish 2006
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Here we are back again, so you'll see some familiar names in there when you look at Bosnia and Herzogovina and Serbia and so on.
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Disraeli and Bismarck met again in the later 1870s in Berlin for the Treaty of Berlin to try to end the fighting in the Balkans between the Turks and the rising nationalities there, a repeat of what we're having with Bosnia and Herzogovina and so on now.
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Herzogovina came near precipitating a conflict between Austria and
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock 1840-1916 1913
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In 1908 Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia (and Herzogovina), a region adjacent to its southeast (and east of Italy across the Adriatic Sea).
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In 1908 Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia (and Herzogovina), a region adjacent to its southeast (and east of Italy across the Adriatic Sea).
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In 1908, Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia (and Herzogovina), a region adjacent to its southeast (and east of Italy across the Adriatic Sea).
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