Breton is spoken in Lower Brittany, France, as a Southwestern Brittonic Celtic language. It was brought from Great Britain to Armorica during Early Middle Ages. The language has four traditional dialects: leoneg, tregerieg, kerneveg, and gwenedeg
Romansh evolved from Latin spoken in the region of modern-day Grisons. Language replaced Celtic and Raetic languages by 5th century AD. Germanic influence began around 765 AD, leading to language shift. First written works appeared in 1527 in Putèr dialect
Spoken in Scottish Lowlands, Northern Isles and northern Ulster. Recognised as indigenous language by Scottish government. Over 1.5 million people speak Scots according to 2022 census
Latvian is an East Baltic language belonging to Indo-European family. Official language of Latvia and one of EU's official languages. About 1.5 million native speakers in Latvia and 100,000 abroad. 62% of Latvia's population uses it as primary language at home
Thailand has 51 indigenous and 24 non-indigenous languages. Central Thai is the official and most widely spoken language. Southeast Asian languages include Lao, Karen, Khmer, Malay, and Vietnamese