Not a recognised standard phrasal verb. In very informal programming jargon, it may mean to make code tangled or disorganised, but this is not established.
spaghetti up
C1
Not an established standard English phrasal verb. 'Spaghetti up' does not appear in mainstream dictionaries.
In plain English
This is not a recognised phrasal verb in standard English.
What does "spaghetti up" mean?
One main meaning — here's how to use it.
1 C1
Usage tip
There is a colloquial and jargon use in software development — 'spaghetti code' describes tangled, unstructured code, and 'spaghetti up' may very occasionally be used informally to mean 'to make code (or something) tangled and confusing', but this is not standardised. It is not in major dictionaries.
How to conjugate "spaghetti up"
The five tense forms you'll use most often.
Base
spaghetti up
I/you/we/they
3rd person
spaghettis up
he/she/it
Past simple
spaghettied up
yesterday
Past participle
spaghettied up
have + pp
-ing form
spaghettiing up
continuous
Hear "spaghetti up" in the wild
Listen to native speakers using "spaghetti up" in real YouTube videos — click a clip to watch it on Looplines.
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