It is the speech of radio and tv announcers.
high German
Low German. It's in fact not only a dialect, but a real language. That causes something real odd : The people in the north speak a better High German than southern people. For southern Germans the official High German is just another dialect, because the original local dialect is always a High German dialect. For northern people it's almost a foreign language . So over the last hundred years the northern people learned a perfect High German, but Low German was more and more forgotten. Today the majority in the north can understand Low German, and also speak a little bit, but to meet someone who speaks it fluently isn't that easy.
Autoversicherung translates to "car insurance" in German, in particular a dialect called High German. High German is spoken mostly in central and southern Germany.
Bavarian is a dialect of German spoken in the region of Bavaria--in south Germany, bordering on Switzerland and Austria. It is a very distinct dialect, but its speakers can also speak and understand High German.
Upper Saxon German
Willsch a Bombole? is not a High German expression. It is Swabian dialect for Willst Du ein Bonbon? and translates as would you like a sweet/candy?
In Saarbrücken, the local dialect is Saarlandisch. This dialect is a variant of the Moselle Franconian dialect group and is influenced by both German and French languages due to the region's history of being situated on the border of both countries.
The play Arsenic and Old Lace (German Arsen und Sptizenhäubchen) by Joseph Kesselring was translated into German by Annemarie Artinger. Apart from her High German translation, there is also a Low German translation by Konrad Hansen (Arsenik un ole Spitzen), an alemannic dialect version (Gift un Spitzehüübli), as well as a Swiss German dialect translation by Roger Thieret (Freude Herrscht).
Sammelas is not a regular German word but could be part of a German dialect.
Marion Dexter Learned has written: 'The American ethnographical survey' -- subject(s): Registers of births, Industry, Germans, Description and travel 'Abraham Lincoln's ancestry, German or English?' -- subject(s): Family 'Abraham Lincoln' -- subject(s): Family, Name 'Application of the phonetic system of the American Dialect Society to Pennsylvania German' -- subject(s): Pennsylvania German dialect 'The Pennsylvania German Dialect' -- subject(s): Pennsylvania German dialect
Greeds is not a regular German word (it may be dialect word).
With the possible exception of it being a local dialect word, thurg is not German.