154 resultados para Riddles, Serbian.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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v.16. Epistolary correspondence. Letters from August 1714, to September 1724.--v.17. Epistolary correspondence. Letters from September 1725 to May 1732.--v.18. Epistolary correspondence. Letters from May 19, 1732, to October 23, 1736.--v.19. Epistolary corresondence. Letters from October 30, 1736, to February 14, 1750. Appendix to the original correspondence between Dean Swift and his friends. Correspondence between Swift and Miss Vanhomrigh. Index.
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kn. 4. U kojoj su pjesme junačke novijih vremena o vojevanju za slobodu.
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--Index of media.--Index of titles.
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Reprint edited by Milovan Ćurčić.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Unveränd. fotomech. Nachdruck d. Originalausg., Zentralantiquariat der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik, Leipzig, 1967.
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A collection of miscellaneous pamphlets.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Series title in part at head of t.-p.
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Largely extracted from Vuk Karadz̆ić's Narodne srpske pjesme (cf. p. xli-xlii).
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In Serbo-Croatian (roman).
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Aim: The objective of this prospective study was to conduct medication management reviews (MMR) in people from a non-English speaking background (NESB) (Bosnian/Serbian/ Croatian, from former Yugoslavia, currently residing in Australia) in their native language in order to identify medication-related problems (needs analysis) and implement appropriate therapeutic interventions, in collaboration with their general practitioners (GPs). Methods: Twenty-five participants entered the study. Each was interviewed and medication-related issues were identified by the health care team. Results: Various interventions (over 150 for the whole group, an average of 6 per participant), based on actual and potentia medication-related problems, were designed to improve the use of medicines. The MMRs introduced effective changes into the participants' health care. Psychological (e.g., feeling depressed) and sociological factors (e.g., costs of medicines, not understanding labels written in English) were identified having significant impacts on medication management. Conclusions: These data confirmed there are avoidable medication-related problems in people from a NESB. GPs and pharmacists working in health care teams with a trained interpreter could greatly improve medication use through regular review and a team approach to problem identification and solving.