No, they pronounce it correctly.
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I think OP was asking about young kids who are still learning to pronounce words correctly.
I think I quick edit in the title would have cleared up a lot of confusion here.
Exactly, it's Pischetti
Bruschetta
I was once an Italian kid. My parents would have beat me if I pronounced spaghetti wrong.
So no. They don't.
And if they do, they won't be able to tell you after
Kids are about the only thing Italians can beat in a fight.
Amirite?
How do you mispronounce something with your hands?
"Thank you" and "bullshit" are pretty close in American Sign Language.
It happens!
Thank you and bitch are much closer. At least the way I learned bullshit involved two hands.
I always thought the mispronunciation was more of a puhscetti than a buhsgetti
I've encountered both. The two I mentioned got the point across.
We say spuhghetti around these parts.
I feel like I'm misunderstanding the joke though.
They're talking about when young Italian kids are first learning the word do they mispronounce it the same way.
I'm just confused on the buh part. I've never heard anyone pronounce it like that.
think someone under 7 years old
A 6-year old? Sounds more like a 3-year old...lol
shit idk, i avoid kids.
The pronunciations you have in your head are mispronunciations that some children & uneducated people use.
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?
From what I remember the last time I heard an Italian kid mispronounce spaghetti they just skipped the s so the result was paghetti.
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.
No, we don't.
I can't say this with 100% certainty, but Italians migrated to America at the end of the 19th century. And they did so from the poorer south. So I've heard that American Italian communities speak Italian like modern day grandparents. Here's an article on why American Italians pronounce cappacola gabagol.