Category
page 1Languages of Ukraine
Greek
Indo-European language
Polish
West Slavic language
Ukrainian
East Slavic language
Romanian
Romance language
Hungarian
Uralic language
Bulgarian
South Slavic language

Yiddish
thumb|The opening page of the 1828 Yiddish-written Jewish holiday of Purim play Esther, oder die belohnte Tugend from [[Fürth (by Nürnberg), Bavaria]]
Tatar
Turkic language spoken by Tatars
Gothic
extinct East Germanic language spoken by the Goths
Romani
language of the Romani people belonging to the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European language family
Gagauz
Turkic language, spoken mainly by the Gagauz people and the official language of the autonomous Moldovan region of Gagauzia
Rusyn
East Slavic language spoken by Carpathian Rusyns, Lemkos, Boykos, and Hutsuls
Lezgian
Northeast Caucasian language that belongs to the Lezgic languages
Pontic Greek
Greek dialect
Urum
Turkic language spoken in a few villages in Southeastern Ukraine
Plautdietsch
Plautdietsch () or Mennonite Low German is a Low Prussian dialect of East Low German with Dutch influence that developed in the 16th and 17th centuries in the Vistula delta area of Royal Prussia. The word Plautdietsch translates to "flat (or low) German" (referring to the plains of northern Germany). In other Low German dialects, the word for Low German is usually realised as Plattdütsch/Plattdüütsch or Plattdüütsk , – very often also as Plattdeutsch – but the spelling Plautdietsch is used to refer specifically to the Vistula variant of the language.
Russian language in Ukraine
East Slavic language in Ukraine
languages of Ukraine
languages of a geographic region
West Polesian
East Slavic language spoken in Southwestern Belarus and in the bordering regions of Poland
Armenian-Qypchak
language
Carpathian Romani
group of dialects of the Romani language
Ukrainian Sign Language
sign language used in Ukraine
Koryo-mar
Koryo-mar (; ) is a language spoken by Koryo-saram, ethnic Koreans who live in the countries of the former Soviet Union. It is descended from the Hamgyŏng dialect and multiple other varieties of Northeastern Korean. Koryo-mar is often reported as difficult to understand by speakers of standard Korean due to the differences in writing, pronunciation, and vocabulary; this may be compounded by the fact that the majority of Koryo-saram today use Russian and not Korean as their first language.
language policy in Ukraine
laws of Ukraine regarding language
Lemko
language or dialect of Rusyn
Mariupolitan Greek
dialect of Greek from the Azov shore
Zipser German
Germanic dialect developed in Slovakia
Lwów subdialect
non-standard dialect of the Polish language
Belarusian language in Ukraine
use of the Belarusian language in Ukraine
Ukrainian dialects
dialect of the Ukrainian language