It's the case of every country on this map. In a country, the official language, along with regional languages, is spoken by every citizen.
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If Torlak is different language from Serbo-Croatian, then Kajkavian is different even more.
Kajkavian is more similar to Slovenian than to Serbo-Croatian standard tokavian.
Ukraine looks irrelevant.
Russian should cover the entire Belarus and eastern/central Ukraine, urban areas of Moldova, some parts of Latvia and Estonia.
I know they have a dialect here, but putting it as a somehow diffeent or separate language ish sounds strange, Every region in sweden talks diffrent like in any country, maby becouse this region belongd to denmark befor they what to classify it as some what diffrent
The Aromanian in Serbia is actually just Romanian
Quite, but it's not really a spoken language, it's just a conglomeration of south-western dialects, some might use it spoken to a certain extent, but it's not a native dialect. I think it's similar to how at least we Trønders speak Bokmålish when in public settings like outside of Trøndelag on TV/Radio etc to be better understood.
Here's a tour of Norwegian dialects.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WHF74ppqKFQ
By the way, I've never heard of "Jämtlandisk", whenever I visit that region of Sweden I can barely tell it's even a dialect.
Moravian is more of a transitional dialect between Czech and Slovák. Although historically we were called Moravian Slovaks. I guess it's easier to say it's it's own thing.