Stuttering is not contagious. If someone else has a stuttering problem, there is no need to worry about being contagious because stuttering is not a contagious disease. However, it is possible for people who stutter to be imitated by others. For example, some people will deliberately imitate the stuttering of others on television or other people for fun, or even to make fun of others. Generally imitating other people’s stuttering will not turn you into a stutterer, and imitating other people’s stuttering and stuttering disorder is usually seen in children, especially young children who have just started talking. When they go to bad imitation of other people’s stuttering behavior, there is a possibility that they will stutter, speak badly, and a series of other problems, and thus also become stutterers and never change. But even so, this is an imitative behavior and not a manifestation of an infectious disease.