In the word "pose," the letter "s" makes the /z/ sound like in "his." In the word "soft," the letter "s" makes the /s/ sound like in "sit." In the word "wise," the letter "s" makes the /z/ sound like in "his."
In Spanish, the letters "c" and "z" generally sound like the English letter "s" when followed by an "i" or "e". For example, "ciudad" (city) and "zapato" (shoe).
Sounds such as /s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/, /t͟ʃ/, and /d͡ʒ/ can be identified as an "s" sound for forming plurals. This includes sounds like /s/, /z/, /t͟ʃ/, and /d͡ʒ/ found in words like "cats," "dogs," "buses," and "pajamas."
Yes you can put an 's after a z , although names ending in s or an s sound are not required to have the second s added in possessive form, it is preferred.Example:Jessica Sanchez' bags can also be written as Jessica Sanchez's bags
The O in the word "lose" has a long OO (long U) sound, and a silent E.(The S makes a Z sound, so the pronunciation is "looz." The similar word that actually has two O's is loose, which is pronounced "loo-s.")
The "s" in umbrellas is pronounced with a "z" sound.
S makes a Z sound. Pri-zim.
The s in "asphalt" is pronounced as a z sound, similar to the sound in words like "zero" or "zebra."
In a word phase letter s gives sound of z(buzzing sound)
It depends on whether the "s" has an "s" sound like in "pass" or a "z" sound like in "girls". "S" sound: Nisliya (نيسليا) "Z" sound: Nizliya (نيزليا)
The "s" in "things" is a "z" sound.
The 's' in appease has the 'z' sound.
it makes a z kind of sound
The letters 'c' and 'z' make the 's' sound.:)
In the word "pose," the letter "s" makes the /z/ sound like in "his." In the word "soft," the letter "s" makes the /s/ sound like in "sit." In the word "wise," the letter "s" makes the /z/ sound like in "his."
The S has a Z sound in reside (as in resign, meaning quit).
It sounds as 's'. Picks, hits, knits etc.