• @[email protected]
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    5511 months ago

    I was once an Italian kid. My parents would have beat me if I pronounced spaghetti wrong.

    So no. They don’t.

    • tubbadu
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      211 months ago

      And if they do, they won’t be able to tell you after

    • Art35ian
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      211 months ago

      Kids are about the only thing Italians can beat in a fight.

      Amirite?

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Ah yes, threats of abuse, famous for always having the outcome they intend

      [edit: especially when dealing with children who are still developing their ability to speak and comprehend speech]

      • @[email protected]
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        4911 months ago

        It was a critique of being raised by Italian parents in the 80s/90s. Please be aware that I made a joke

        • AmidFuror
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          2111 months ago

          It was good. I enjoyed it. Not everything needs to trigger some morally righteous response in our world.

  • @Got_Bent
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    3311 months ago

    How do you mispronounce something with your hands?

  • @morphballganon
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    1511 months ago

    I always thought the mispronunciation was more of a puhscetti than a buhsgetti

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        We say spuhghetti around these parts.

        I feel like I’m misunderstanding the joke though.

      • @LemmyKnowsBest
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        011 months ago

        The pronunciations you have in your head are mispronunciations that some children & uneducated people use.

        • @Buddahriffic
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          211 months ago

          Yes, that’s why OP is asking if Italian children make similar mispronunciations. Like is it an artifact of learning a word that sounds like that in general or of learning it in the context of English specifically?

  • @[email protected]
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    1511 months ago

    From what I remember the last time I heard an Italian kid mispronounce spaghetti they just skipped the s so the result was paghetti.

    • @froh42
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      211 months ago

      Heh. When my daughter was small, she could say spaghetti, but also added the initial “s” to baguette, making it a “spaguette” .

      We’re German, by the way, so we frequently eat both.

  • Devi
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    711 months ago

    Surely they must do? Like kids are not going to find certain sounds like ‘sp’ easier depending on what country they’re from but maybe the sounds they learn first with be different?

    • ares35
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      811 months ago

      it was ‘sketti’ for me back then, and it is still decades later.

    • zout
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      411 months ago

      Pronounciation differs in Italian, so when they mispronounce, it probably wont’t sound like their American counter parts.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      Kids do in fact have an easier time pronouncing syllables they hear about them. And from about age 3 it starts going downhill. At 9 it’s near impossible to learn to speak a new language without accent.

      • 📛Maven
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        11 months ago

        That’s true, but also, speech-motor control develops throughout childhood, and one of the last things children develop is consonant clusters. This means words like (sp)a(gh)etti are harder for most children to say than, for example, “banana”, regardless of their language. Children tend to replace difficult clusters with one of their sounds, and when there’s more than one difficult cluster in a word, sometimes the other sound of one gets transposed in place of the other.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        I’ve heard that it’s until 12~14, depending on exposure.

        I know people who moved to Canada from countries with little exposure at or after the age of 9 who still speak their mother tongue at home, and yet have no accent at all when speaking English. A very linguistically different language from English, at that.

      • Devi
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        011 months ago

        I agree, but things like “Sp”, is that common in italian? I’m not sure but I’m thinking not. It’s interesting and now I need someone with an Italian toddler to chip in.

  • Stamets
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    11 months ago

    deleted by creator

    • @TheDoctorDonna
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      4011 months ago

      They are asking because kids are kids no matter where you live. If we use the same word for the dish as Italians, it stands to reason that children who are still learning would have the same issue regardless of location.

      • @RadicalEagle
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        1211 months ago

        Exactly! I think one of the fun things about growing up is realizing that your personal experience isn’t completely unique, and that other people have shared similar experiences. I also don’t think it’s weird to have the idea that many of the things we enjoy and find funny (like puns and silly sounds) would cross language and cultural boundaries.

      • zout
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        11 months ago

        It’s the same word on paper, but pronounced different. Italians tend to speak the vowels longer, with a slightly different sound (the “a” in American sounds like an “uh”, in Italian like a long “ah”). They also speak out both t’s separately.

        • @Windex007
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          111 months ago

          So how do Italian kids tend to misprounce the word as they’re developing speech?

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        Kids being a blank canvas and universal is a theory that’s been deemed untrue. The kids would have been subjected to s very different soundscape of periode talking and will have practiced different sounds long before they started using words.