Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Hari Mata Hari
1. Bosnia–Herzegovina‘s Hari Mata Hari was third in the contest, which was decided by phone and text message votes from viewers in 38 European countries.
2. This year‘s Bosnian entry, sung by Hari Mata Hari, a Muslim man born Hajrudin Varesanovic ("The Nightingale of Sarajevo"), was composed by Zeljko Joksimovic, Serbia‘s Eurovision contestant in 2004.
3. There was good news at the Eurovision Song Contest on Thursday for a Bosnian songbird, a Turkish diva, an Irish crooner – and a lurid heavy–metal band that declared: "It‘s the Arockalypse." Ten competitors advanced to Saturday‘s final of the venerable international pop competition, including Turkey‘s Sibel Tuzun, Irish singer Brian Kennedy and Bosnian band Hari Mata Hari, led by "Nightingale of Sarajevo" Hajrudin Varesanovic.
4. Some of the acts, like Switzerland‘s Six4One, stick to the classic Eurovision formula of catchy tunes and blandly uplifting lyrics, telling listeners that "If we all give a little, we can make this world a home for everyone." Ireland‘s Brian Kennedy offers a syrupy ballad entitled "Every song is a cry for love," while Bosnia‘s Hari Mata Hari hopes to bring people together with its love song "Lejla." Others are more daring, or eccentric.
5. The masked, horned quintet finished comfortably ahead of Russian heartthrob Dima Bilan and Bosnia and Herzegovina folk group Hari Mata Hari, smashing through a field of ballads and pop songs, mostly sung in English, with their fire–spewing, firework–exploding entry "Hard Rock Hallelujah." "How cool is this?" the band‘s bat–winged frontman "Mr Lordi" asked at the victory press conference for the annual song contest which attracts entries from Russia to Israel.