Bilingual municipalities in Poland

{{Short description|Polish municipality with a second official language a part of polish, made possible by law in 2005}}

The bilingual status of gminas (municipalities) in Poland is regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish. So far 44 gminas have done this:{{cite web|url=http://ksng.gugik.gov.pl/english/files/list_of_minority_names.pdf |title=Map on page of Polish Commission on Standardization of Geographical Names |access-date=20 June 2015}}

German

{{See also|German minority in Poland}}

File:German language in gminas.png

Polish/German bilingual gminas (Gemeinden) in

Other gminas in Opole Voivodeship and Silesian Voivodeship which would be permitted by the Act to make German an auxiliary language are Olesno and Pawłowiczki.

Kashubian

File:Kashubian language in gminas.png

Polish/Kashubian bilingual gminas in Pomeranian Voivodeship:

Lithuanian

Polish/Lithuanian bilingual gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship:

Belarusian

File:Jezyk białoruski w gminach.png

Polish/Belarusian bilingual gminas in Podlaskie Voivodeship:

  • Hajnówka-urban gmina ({{lang|be|Гайнаўка}}) on 3 December 2007
  • Gmina Czyże ({{lang|be|Гміна Чыжы}}) on 8 February 2010
  • Gmina Hajnówka-rural gmina ({{lang|be|Гміна Гайнаўка}}) on 28 May 2010
  • Gmina Narewka ({{lang|be|Гміна Нараўка}}) on 16 September 2009
  • Gmina Orla ({{lang|be|Гміна Орля}}) on 7 May 2009

Lemko

Gallery

File:Bielanka.jpg|Polish/Lemko place-name sign in Bielanka

File:Ulica_Księdza_Kossak-Główczewskiego,_Jastarnia_-_001.JPG|Polish/Kashubian street name sign in Jastarnia

File:Dolina_Jadwigi_znak.jpg|Polish/Kashubian road sign with the village name (Dolina Jadwigi)

File:Oleksze1.jpg|Bilingual Polish/Belarusian sign in Oleksze

File:Kosorowice.jpeg|Polish/German place-name sign in Kosorowice

References