English: Municipalities where the several national varieties of Serbo-Croatian (Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian/Bosniak, and Montenegrin) were declared the language of a plurality of respondents. (As of 2006)
References
Published references:
Popis stanovništva, domaćinstava i stanova u 2002. - Stanovništvo - knjiga 3 - Veroispovest, maternji jezik i nacionalna ili etnička pripadnost prema starosti i polu (podaci po opštinama), Republika Srbija - Republički zavod za statistiku, Beograd, maj 2003.
Popis stanovništva, domaćinstava i stanova u 2003. - Stanovništvo - knjiga 3 - vjeroispovest, maternji jezik i nacionalna ili etnička pripadnost prema starosti i polu (podaci po opštinama), Republika Crna Gora - Zavod za statistiku, Podgorica, novembar 2004.
Internet references:
http://www.monstat.cg.yu/Popis/Popis03.zip - Crna Gora - Popis stanovništva, domaćinstava i stanova u 2003. - Stanovništvo - knjiga 3 - vjeroispovest, maternji jezik i nacionalna ili etnička pripadnost prema starosti i polu (podaci po opštinama).
http://www.dzs.hr/ - Hrvatska - Popis stanovništva 2001. - STANOVNIŠTVO PREMA MATERINSKOM JEZIKU, PO GRADOVIMA/OPĆINAMA.
which lists the terms Bosnian and Bosniak (often used as synonyms) as two languages, due to data from the 2003 Montenegrin census that lists them separately.
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2010-11-22 13:52 PANONIAN 1705×1542× (183829 bytes) improved compromise version - I will elaborate my changes on talk page. Please do not revert without discussion.
2010-10-22 09:25 PANONIAN 1705×1479× (198775 bytes) {{Information |Description = Ethno-political division of the Serbo-Croatian language or Serbo-Croatian diasystem — areas where Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian/Bosniak, and Montenegrin are spoken by the majority or plurality of speakers (as of 2006) — d
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Reverted to version as of 09:08, 8 April 2014 (UTC) - if map show situation in 2006 then you should not add 2011 data to it. please upload your version under different filename