bohemia

listen to the pronunciation of bohemia
English - Turkish
bohem

Bizimle Bohemian ormanlarına gel! - Come with us to the Bohemian forests!

English - English
A community of bohemians, unconventional artists or writers
a region in the west of the former Czechoslovakia and present-day Czech Republic
Former kingdom, central Europe. Settled in the 5th century AD by the Czechs, it became tributary to Charlemagne's empire. It was part of the kingdom of Moravia in 870; on the dissolution of Moravia, it became a duchy with an important center at Prague. In the 10th century it expanded to include parts of Silesia, Slovakia, and Kraków. From the election of Ferdinand I as king in 1526, it remained under Habsburg rule until 1918. Following World War I, Bohemia declared independence along with Moravia and Slovakia. It was invaded by Germany in 1939 on the pretext that much of the population was German. After World War II it became a province of Czechoslovakia (later the Czech Socialist Republic). On the breakup of the eastern European bloc, it became part of the independent Czech Republic in 1993
{i} region in the west Czech Republic
See Bohemian, n
A country of central Europe
a historical area and former kingdom in the Czech Republic
Fig
{i} artistic sphere, people with irregular or artsy way of life
The region or community of social Bohemians
Bohemia crystal
Bohemian glass, or Bohemia crystal, is a decorative glass produced in regions of Bohemia and Silesia, now in the current state of the Czech Republic
bohemia

    Hyphenation

    Bo·he·mi·a

    Turkish pronunciation

    bōhimiı

    Pronunciation

    /bōˈhēmēə/ /boʊˈhiːmiːə/
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