Both pronounced with a z
In American English, "music" and "visa" are pronounced with a z sound.
The "s" in umbrellas is pronounced with a "z" sound.
Nariz. The z is pronounced like the s in English for American Spanish. The z is pronounced like th for European Spanish.
The s in "asphalt" is pronounced as a z sound, similar to the sound in words like "zero" or "zebra."
HISS LIKE A SNAKE WHEN THE S IS PRONOUNCED NOT A Z
Azul. When pronouncing it, the "Z" is pronounced as an "S".
A speech defect in which s is pronounced like th in thickand z is pronounced like thinthis.
In Portuguese we spell it Brasil, but the "s" is pronounced as a "z".
Both can.
In Spanish z and s are pronounced the same way, I think some people who move to the US change it to s so it will not be pronounced wrong. I may be wrong, so someone correct me if I am.
Z. Sidney Sampson has written: 'The evolution of music' -- subject(s): History and criticism, Music
The name does not change in Spanish, but it is traditionally pronounced with the Z sounded out as an S.
Wo sind alle. (Remember: W is pronounced like the Englisyh V and S at the beginning of a word is pronounced like Z)