释义 |
Definition of Croatian in English: Croatiannoun krəʊˈeɪʃ(ə)nkroʊˈeɪʃən 1A native or inhabitant of Croatia, or a person of Croatian descent. Example sentencesExamples - This is just like the earlier immigrations of Poles and Irish and Jews and Croatians and Germans and everyone else who's come to America's shores.
- The other recognized minorities are Slovaks, Croatians, Serbians, Romanians, Slovenians, Germans, Greeks, Ukrainians and Armenians.
- They go to all sorts of tournaments in the strangest of places, where the star is the British number five and an unknown Croatian.
- In 1941, Yugoslav territories were seized by Italian, German and Croatian forces.
- The Croatian went down as the Frenchman challenged, but the referee waved play on from a distant position.
- Four days later, a Croatian victory over the Latvians may well relegate the Scots to third place.
- The Romanian stand had a coffee bar and the Croatians entertained their guests with folk music.
- Her father was a Croatian architect, her mother was a French Catholic from Tours.
- In the 1730s Slovenians and Croatians established small agricultural settlements in Georgia.
- The Croatian father will astound you with his sensational grasp of English swear words.
- To stroll around the old walled city of Dubrovnik on the Croatian coast is to savour one of Europe's gems.
- The years between the two world wars were marked by spasmodic European immigration, especially of Italians, Greeks, Croatians, Maltese, and Jews.
- Ancient White and Norway pines were felled to build cabins, and in the warmth of those cabins the Finns, Slovenians and Croatians bred, so creating a demand for more cabins.
- The Croatians barely missed out on silver to the Italians in Milan and finished with silver in Munich.
- I know plenty of Italians, Spaniards, Irish, Serbs, Croatians, Greeks, Portuguese, French, and Russians who have black hair, dark eyes, and olive skin.
- Forging some 2,400 Croatians, Turks and Americans into an efficient roadbuilding work force has been as much a challenge as cutting the road.
- And it goes without saying that the Croatian fans were kinder on the eye than their English counterparts.
- From 1880 through 1914, Croatians and other Eastern European peasants immigrated to the United States in large numbers.
- We had Croatians, Italians, Greeks, etc., and it was a very diverse cultural mix.
- They have a Nigerian and a Bulgarian in the forward line, a Trinidadian and a Dutchman at the back, and have just bought a Croatian.
2mass noun The Southern Slavic language of the Croats, almost identical to Serbian but written in the Roman alphabet. See Serbo-Croat
adjective krəʊˈeɪʃ(ə)nkroʊˈeɪʃən Relating to the Croats or their language.
Rhymes ablation, aeration, agnation, Alsatian, Amerasian, Asian, aviation, cetacean, citation, conation, creation, counterdemonstration, counterproliferation, crustacean, curation, Dalmatian, delation, dilation, donation, duration, elation, fixation, Galatian, geolocation, glocalization, gyration, Haitian, halation, Horatian, ideation, illation, lavation, legation, libation, location, lunation, mutation, natation, nation, negation, notation, nutation, oblation, oration, ovation, potation, relation, rogation, rotation, Sarmatian, sedation, Serbo-Croatian, station, staycation, taxation, Thracian, vacation, vexation, vocation, zonation Definition of Croatian in US English: CroatiannounkroʊˈeɪʃənkrōˈāSHən 1A native or inhabitant of Croatia, or a person of Croatian descent. Example sentencesExamples - From 1880 through 1914, Croatians and other Eastern European peasants immigrated to the United States in large numbers.
- The years between the two world wars were marked by spasmodic European immigration, especially of Italians, Greeks, Croatians, Maltese, and Jews.
- We had Croatians, Italians, Greeks, etc., and it was a very diverse cultural mix.
- This is just like the earlier immigrations of Poles and Irish and Jews and Croatians and Germans and everyone else who's come to America's shores.
- They go to all sorts of tournaments in the strangest of places, where the star is the British number five and an unknown Croatian.
- Four days later, a Croatian victory over the Latvians may well relegate the Scots to third place.
- The other recognized minorities are Slovaks, Croatians, Serbians, Romanians, Slovenians, Germans, Greeks, Ukrainians and Armenians.
- In the 1730s Slovenians and Croatians established small agricultural settlements in Georgia.
- The Croatians barely missed out on silver to the Italians in Milan and finished with silver in Munich.
- And it goes without saying that the Croatian fans were kinder on the eye than their English counterparts.
- In 1941, Yugoslav territories were seized by Italian, German and Croatian forces.
- Her father was a Croatian architect, her mother was a French Catholic from Tours.
- They have a Nigerian and a Bulgarian in the forward line, a Trinidadian and a Dutchman at the back, and have just bought a Croatian.
- Forging some 2,400 Croatians, Turks and Americans into an efficient roadbuilding work force has been as much a challenge as cutting the road.
- The Croatian went down as the Frenchman challenged, but the referee waved play on from a distant position.
- I know plenty of Italians, Spaniards, Irish, Serbs, Croatians, Greeks, Portuguese, French, and Russians who have black hair, dark eyes, and olive skin.
- The Romanian stand had a coffee bar and the Croatians entertained their guests with folk music.
- To stroll around the old walled city of Dubrovnik on the Croatian coast is to savour one of Europe's gems.
- The Croatian father will astound you with his sensational grasp of English swear words.
- Ancient White and Norway pines were felled to build cabins, and in the warmth of those cabins the Finns, Slovenians and Croatians bred, so creating a demand for more cabins.
2The South Slavic language of the Croats, almost identical to Serbian but written in the Roman alphabet. See Serbo-Croat
adjectivekroʊˈeɪʃənkrōˈāSHən Relating to the Croats or their language. |