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"Aged" and "old" are English equivalents of the Italian word becchio. The masculine singular adjective/noun/pronoun in question serves as a dialectical, regional form of the same-meaninged, standard vecchio and whose most famous use is as the pasteurized cow's milk cheese Piave Becchio of Veneto in northern Italy. The pronunciation will be "BEK-kyo" in Italian.

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Peck, [That I/you/he/she/it] may peck, or You're pecking may be English equivalents of 'becchi'in its use as an Italian verb. The form may be the second person imperative 'becchi', which means '[you] peck!' Or it may be the verb forms for the first through third persons of the present subjunctive 'becchi', which means '[that I/you/he/she/it] may peck'. Or it may be the second person singular of the present indicative 'becchi': '[you] are pecking, do peck, peck'.

Beaks is an English equivalent of 'becchi' in its use as an Italian noun. It's a masculine noun whose definite article is 'i' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'dei'['some']. It's pronounced 'BEHK-kee'.

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Q: What is 'becchio' when translated from Italian to English?
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