Bosnian, archaic form, a person from the region of Bosnia
Dusán Sžetzetižicž (born 8 December 1990 in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina), is a Bosnian football (soccer) player who currently plays in Italy for Sicilian club A.S.D. Castiglione.
Ivana Ninković (born 15 December 1995 in Trebinje, Bosnia and Herzegovina) is a Bosnian swimmer who swims for Swimming Club ' Olymp ' Banja Luka and for Bosnia and Herzegovina national swim team.
He is featured on a song off of album Protuotrov (antidote) by Bosnian rapper Frenkie, the song is called Živili (live on) featuring Masta Ace & Phat Philly and is produced by Edo Maajka.
Mustafa Imamović (born 1941, Gradačac) is a Bosnian historian of state and law.
Saša Stanišić (born 17 March 1978) is a Bosnian/German writer.
Bosnians |
10 Minutes is a 2002 short film contrasting ten minutes in the life of a Japanese tourist in Rome with the bloody drama of a Bosnian family taking place at the same time less than an hour away in the besieged city of Sarajevo during the Bosnian War.
In July 1943 he and several other Bosnian Ulema in the Handschar attended an "Imam Training Course" in Berlin organised by SS Obergruppenführer Gottlob Berger.
Provide Promise offered humanitarian relief airlift support to the city of Sarajevo, while Deny Flight enforced the "no-fly" zone against Serb air attacks on Bosnian civilians.
It was the first facing of Turks at Rudine, the Bosnians, although fewer, finally fought near the town of Bileća and gave them a defeat, which delayed the Ottomans' advances into Bosnia.
An Apache helicopter fired two Hellfire-missiles at the farm, killing the Bosnians and civilians inside.
Bisera Alikadić (born 1939) is a contemporary Bosnian poet from Livno.
The situation changed again in the 20th century, as Bosanac (see also Bosnian and Bosnians) came to be the preferred term.
Elvir Laković, also known as Laka, (born 15 March 1969) is a Bosnian rock singer-songwriter, born in Goražde, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Fahrudin "Faz" Kuduzović (born 10 October 1984 in Vlasenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina) is a Bosnian-British amateur footballer who currently plays for Eintracht Trier in the Regionalliga West amateur league in Germany.
Faruk Hadžibegić (born 7 October 1957 in Sarajevo, PR Bosnia-Herzegovina, FPR Yugoslavia), is a Bosnian football manager and a retired football player.
In 2011, Varešanović composed the music to and wrote the lyrics to Briši me, a song sung by Bosnian singer Lepa Brena for her sixteenth studio album Začarani krug.
Kemal Hafizović (born May 12, 1950 in Zenica, SFR Yugoslavia) is a former Bosnian football player and now a manager best known for his playing and coaching career with NK Čelik Zenica.
Marijan Bakula (born 17 April 1966 in Žepče, SFR Yugoslavia) is a former Bosnian football player.
Nedžad Ibrišimović, (20 October 1940 – 15 September 2011) was a Bosnian writer and sculptor.
Nikša Bratoš (born on 17 August 1959 in Travnik) is a Bosnian musician who gained fame in former Yugoslavia.
Omer Halilhodžić (born 1963 in Mostar) is a Bosnian automotive designer.
Pjer Žalica (born 7 May 1964 in Sarajevo) is a Bosnian film director and a professor at the Academy of Performing Arts in Sarajevo.
When Halili started his new job as Tirana's Chairman, his first step in his job was to hire Bosnian coach Blaž Slišković for the 2008-2009 season.
Senad Bašić (born 26 August 1962, Trebinje) is a Bosnian actor.
Slobodan "Čobo" Janjuš (born January 7, 1952 in Sarajevo) is a Bosnian former football goalkeeper.
Vitomir Lukić (Zelenika, September 24, 1929 - Sarajevo, May 30, 1991), was a Bosnian-Croat prose writer and pedagogue, considered to be one of the greatest writers to emerge from Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 20th century.
Zehra Deović (born 1938) is a Bosnian sevdalinka singer and was one of the leading female singers of the 1960s and 1970s in Yugoslavia, along with Silvana Armenulić, Nada Mamula and Beba Selimović.