There is no plural form of the word Spaghetti.
This will shock you but its actually spaghetto
There is no plural form of the word Spaghetti.
The correct spelling for the pasta is "spaghetti" (the plural is almost never used).
The English to Italian translation for spaghetti is "gli spaghetti". Spaghetti is of Italian origin, and is the plural form of the Italian word "spaghetto".
The Italians of course! Spaghetti comes from the word spago meaning string. Spaghetti describes the plural and smaller form of the word.
The pronoun to use is "it," since spaghetti is a thing.Example : "Come eat your spaghetti before it gets cold."(In Italian, spaghetti is the plural of spaghetto, and uses theplural pronoun gli.)
Spaghetti is the plural form of the Italian word spaghetto, which is a diminutive of spago, meaning "thin string" or "twine". The word spaghetti can be literally translated as "little lines."
Gli spaghetti sono buoni! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Spaghetti is good!" The masculine plural phrase translates literally as "The spaghetti are good!" in English. The pronunciation will be "lyee spa-GET-tee SO-no BWO-nee" in Pisan Italian.
Spaghetti is a type of pasta. Its name means "little strings" or "little twine" in Italian because that is what its shape resembles. Spagho is a related Italian word meaning "thread".Broken down, the Italian name is derived from: Spagowhich means twine, Spaghetto which means little twine, and Spaghetti is plural for Spaghetto.For more information about spaghetti and pasta see the related links and related questions.
Spaghetti plural form of the Italian word spaghetto, which is a diminutive of spago, meaning "thin string" or "twine".
The word Spaghetti came from the Italian plural of spaghetto, diminutive of spago, "thin rope." It entered the English language round 1885-90
Actually, there is one, as spaghetti is plural. The singular is spaghetto. It starts out from the root spago, from the Italian, which means "cord" or "string." So spaghetti means cords/strings. Spaghettini (plural of spaghettino) are thinner.This is in Italian, the language of the culture from which this food derives, but, obviously, people in English-speaking countries don't usually know this.
gli spaghetti - the spaghetti