Yugoslavia no longer exists. It was not part of the European Union when it did exist. It broke up into a number of countries. Slovenia and Croatia are two countries that were part of Yugoslavia and are now members of the European Union.
Full name of Macedonia is Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, so Macedonia was a part of Yugoslavia. Slovenia was also a part of Yugoslavia. Slovakia however was not a part of Yugoslavia, but it was a part of Czechoslovakia, both of them were communist countries after WW2.
No, Montenegro and Serbia are two separated countries.
Yugoslavia no longer exists. The following countries which were part of Yugoslavia have a coast on the Mediterranean: Slovenia Croatia Bosnia Hercegovina Montenegro
The country of Yugoslavia no longer exists, the countries that used to be part of it each use theri own currencies.
There are 28 countries in the European Union of which two, Croatia and Slovenia, were part of Yugoslavia.
The six countries that were once part of Yugoslavia are Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, the Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. ...
Croatia is an independent country. It is a former part of Yugoslavia and not comprised of it's own countries.
The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia is an independent country. It was part of Yugoslavia, which has now separated into several different countries.
The six countries that were once part of Yugoslavia are Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, the Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. ...
No. Yugoslavia began to break up in the 1990s. Some new countries that formed as a result of that breakup joined the EU in 2004 and later than that. Some of the countries that were part of Yugoslavia are not members of the EU, but may join in the future.
No, English is not spoken in any of the countries of former Yugoslavia.