Sinjë is a village and a former municipality in Berat County, central Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision of the municipality Berat. The population at the 2011 census was 3,351.
Sinj (pronounced [sîːɲ]) (Italian: Signo, German: Zein), is a town in the continental part of Split-Dalmatia County, Croatia. The town itself has a population of 11,478 and the population of the administrative municipality, which includes surrounding villages, is 24,826 (2011).
Sinj is the center of an area known as Cetinska krajina, a group of settlements situated on a fertile karstic field (Sinjsko polje) through which the river Cetina passes. Sinj lies between four mountains: Svilaja, Dinara, Kamešnica and Visoka. Those mountains give Sinj its specific submediterranean climate (hotter summers and colder winters).
Sinj was seized by the Turks in 1524 who maintained control until 1686, when it was liberated by the Venitians. The town grew around an ancient fortress held by the Ottomans from 16th until the end of 17th century, and the Franciscan monastery with the church of Our Lady of Sinj (Gospa Sinjska), a place of pilgrimage. The last Turkish siege in 1715 was repulsed.
People go dancing
In crowded rooms
My head is getting tired
Darkness looms
Children go cursing
At their only cause
Why won't it snow?
Like they said it would
What is it that they know?
That I really should
I check my look
In the mirror, it don't glow
My face is getting thinner
Darkness shows
Children go cursing
At their only cause
Why won't it snow?
Like they said it would
What is it that they know?
That I really should
Why won't it snow?
Like they said it would
What is it that they know?