yeah the s section goes like this
sa shi su se so and the z like
za ji zu ze zo
風 /ka ze/.
イゼベル /i ze be ru/.
イゼベル /i ze be ru/.
ゼウス (ze u su)
The sound of "z" is incorporated into some Japanese syllables: za, zu, ze, and zo.
ゼロ /ze ro/ is not originally Japanese. It's merely the same word in English, inserted into Japanese.
'ze tsu me tsu' ' zen me tsu'
ZE-TSU-BOU-TE-KI-NA or ZETSUBOUTEKINA
Here is "koko." It's pronounced: koh-koh.
'I love [it/you]!' The 'ze' on the end makes it super colloquial, masculine, and a little rough.
A very casual and masculine way of saying it would be 'Kusai ze anta.'
風の竜 (ka ze no ryuu) is Japanese for 'wind dragon'.