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WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024Mac•e•do•ni•a (mas′i dō′nē ə, -dōn′yə),USA pronunciation n. Also, Mac•e•don (mas′i don′).USA pronunciation an ancient kingdom in the Balkan Peninsula, in S Europe: now a region in N Greece, SW Bulgaria, and the Republic of Macedonia.- Place Namesa republic in S Europe: formerly (1945–92) a constituent republic of Yugoslavia. 2,113,866;
9928 sq. mi. (25,713 sq. km).[Cap.:]Skopje. Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: Macedonia /ˌmæsɪˈdəʊnɪə/ n - a country in SE Europe, comprising the NW half of ancient Macedon: it became part of the kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (subsequently Yugoslavia) in 1913; it declared independence in 1992, but Greece objected to the use of the historical name Macedonia; in 1993 it was recognized by the UN under its current official name. Official language: Macedonian. Religion: Christian majority, Muslim, nonreligious, and Jewish minorities. Currency: denar. Capital: Skopje. Pop: 2 066 000 (2004 est). Area: 25 713 sq km (10 028 sq miles)
Serbian name: Makedonija Official name: Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Abbreviation: FYROM - an area of N Greece, comprising the regions of Macedonia Central, Macedonia West, and part of Macedonia East and Thrace
Modern Greek name: Makedhonia - a district of SW Bulgaria, now occupied by Blagoevgrad province. Area: 6465 sq km (2496 sq miles)
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: Macedon /ˈmæsɪˌdɒn/, Macedonia n - a region of the S Balkans, now divided among Greece, Bulgaria, and Macedonia (Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia). As a kingdom in the ancient world it achieved prominence under Philip II (359–336 bc) and his son Alexander the Great
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