Диалекты и говоры условного немецкого языка // Dialects and subdialects of conventional German
This article explores the rich diversity of German dialects and subdialects, classifying them into main groups: Upper German (southern Germany, Austria, Switzerland), Central German (central Germany), and Low German (northern Germany). It highlights the difficulty in precisely quantifying the number of dialects due to their blurred boundaries, estimated from 3-4 main groups to several hundred local variants. The article also discusses the historical connections of Dutch and Tyrolean dialects, the specific dialects of Russian Germans (primarily Low German), and Yiddish as a distinct Germanic language. The second part details the historical evolution of Germany's administrative divisions—from hundreds of entities in the Holy Roman Empire to 16 federal states in modern Germany. The article concludes with an overview of six German-speaking countries (Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein) and regions with significant German-speaking communities.