Neapolitan language | Minjiang dialect | Kansai dialect | Samogitian dialect | Doric dialect | Cypriot dialect | Norfolk dialect | Geordie dialect words | Doric dialect (Scotland) | Neapolitan Republic | Lancashire dialect and accent | Balearic dialect | balearic dialect | Yooper dialect | ''Wenn der Rapp bleht in Piddaschwald'', a poem in the dialect of Peterswald-Löffelscheid | Upper Navarrese dialect | Upper Carniolan dialect | Styrian dialect group | Romanesco dialect | Pothohari dialect | Pomeranian (German dialect group) | Pemako Tshangla dialect | Old Guangde dialect | Ohrid dialect | Northern Khmer dialect | Negombo Tamil dialect | Neapolitan War | Neapolitan School | Neapolitan Republic (Napoleonic) | Multani dialect |
"Funiculì, Funiculà" is a famous Neapolitan song that was written in 1880, with lyrics by journalist Peppino Turco set to music by composer Luigi Denza.
Cardillo's richly scored and still popular 1911 romance Core 'ngrato (Ungrateful Heart) — also known by its lyric Catarì, Catarì, pecchè me dici sti parole amare — was written in America to a text in Neapolitan dialect by Alessandro Sisca; it is in fact the only famous Neapolitan song by an Italian-American immigrant.