Is it pronounced with a "ch" sound like "chella" or is pronounced with an "s" sound like "sella"? Marco?
Is it pronounced with a "ch" sound like "chella" or is pronounced with an "s" sound like "sella"? Marco?
lol, and bruschetta is brus'ketta, not bru'shetta.I thought as much, but you can't be too careful with things like this. People get excited, tempers flare, this is serious business! Thank you.
Is it pronounced with a "ch" sound like "chella" or is pronounced with an "s" sound like "sella"? Marco?
I thought as much, but you can't be too careful with things like this. People get excited, tempers flare, this is serious business! Thank you.
lol, and bruschetta is brus'ketta, not bru'shetta.
lol, and bruschetta is brus'ketta, not bru'shetta.
After taking 7 years of Italian, that mistake (from others) drives me entirely insane.
lol, and bruschetta is brus'ketta, not bru'shetta.
This one always just made sense to me, somehow. I hear the "sch" in bruschetta the same way I hear it in scheme. No one would say, "What are you 'sheeming' about?"
Nothing's worse than "I want a panini," or "We're having paninis!"
As my Italian teacher said, the word "panino" sounds just as exotic as "panini" so why has the latter become synonymous with meaning a singular sandwich?
How about Graffito?
Can I have a biscotti with it?
Most waiters where I live mispronounce it.The waiter at an Italian restaurant corrected me on that.
Nothing's worse than "I want a panini," or "We're having paninis!"
As my Italian teacher said, the word "panino" sounds just as exotic as "panini" so why has the latter become synonymous with meaning a singular sandwich?