MapisM
Well-Known Member
I'm afraid I'm with your colleagues.Can any Italian speakers tell me what Dindo means? It's not the usual word for turkey, but seems to be used to mean that. Native Italian speaker at work had never seen it before.
"Dindo" doesn't mean a iota in Italian, afaik.
If anything, it reminds me of "dildo", which ain't exactly IT-specific...
Turkey in IT is "tacchino", for the records.
PS for Roberto: no need to correct anything of what you said.
I don't think anyone can ever forget his/her mother tongue, regardless of when he/she left the Country.
The second generation, maybe. But that's a different matter.
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