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  1. Genetic studies on Bosniaks. As with all modern European nations, a large degree of 'biological continuity' exists between Bosnians and Bosniaks and their ancient predecessors with Y chromosomal lineages testifying to predominantly Paleolithic European ancestry. [1] [2] Studies based on bi-allelic markers of the NRY (non-recombining region of ...

  2. bosniak.org › about-bosniaksAbout Bosniaks

    Bosniaks are an ethnic group in the Southeastern part of Europe, mainly in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but also present in the neighboring region of Sandzak (Serbia and Montenegro) and countries that were part of former Yugoslavia (North Macedonia, Kosovo, Croatia, and Slovenia). Bosniaks got their name after the river Bosna that flows from its ...

  3. In formal Croatian, verb trebati (need or should) is transitive, as in English. In Serbian, Montenegrin and Bosnian, it is impersonal, like the French il faut, or the English construct is necessary (to); the grammatical subject is either omitted (it), or presents the object of needing; the person that needs something is an indirect grammatical ...

  4. Bosniaks in Kosovo Report of the engagement of the Turkish authorities in Skopje over the settlers from Bosnia and Herzegovina: The Muhadžhir-Ottoman Club and a temporary school were created. The report recommends the Serbian government to try to acquire the settlers to the Serbian side, by opening a pub, a barber shop and a reading room.

  5. The Bosnian Muslims were the largest ethnic group in Bosnia and Herzegovina before the 1992-1995 war. They lived among Orthodox Serbs, Catholic Croats, and other Bosnians in cities, towns, and villages throughout the country. The largest concentrations of Muslims were in the central and eastern parts and in the northwestern area of the country.

  6. E1b1b-M215 is the second most prevailing haplogroup amongst Serbs, accounting for nearly one-fifth of Serbians. It is represented by four sub-clusters E-V13 (17.49%), E1b1b-V22 (0.33%), and E1b1b-M123 (0.33%). [2] In Southeast Europe, its frequency peaks at the southeastern edge of the region and its variance peaks in the region's southwest.

  7. Notable Bosnian Canadians. Asmir Begović, soccer player and Bosnia and Herzegovina international. Blagoje Bratić, soccer player. Zijad Delić, imam, activist, teacher, scholar and public speaker. Merlin Dervisevic, director of Cruel and Unusual. Igor Drljaca, film director. Johnathan Kovacevic, hockey player. Vladimir Kuljanin, basketball player.

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