The letter "s" can sound like "sh" in certain contexts due to the influence of surrounding letters or specific language rules. For example, in English, "s" is pronounced as "sh" in words like "sure" and "measure" because of the combination of "s" with the letters "u" or "e" that modify its sound. This phenomenon is often a result of historical linguistic changes and the evolution of pronunciation over time.
Sh-Roz-des-t-vom
The combinations TI and CI sometimes make the SH sound (written [ʃ] in the International Phonetic Alphabet), as in "function" /fʌŋkʃən/ and "glacier" /glɛɪʃɝ/.
Scheiße: start off with a /sh/ sound as in "shoe" then say the English word "ice" depending on the context sometimes you say the final "e" and sometimes not. if so: the end is pronounced "e" as in Edit sh-ice-e simple way = shy-zuh
Först Pronounced the same as in English, but the 's' is pronounced as 'sh'.
心 Xīn Pronounced *sheen * The x is pronounced almost like sh, but not quite. It's more of a mix between s- and sh-
Sh. Sh. Dolginov has written: 'Magnetizm planet' -- subject(s): Cosmic magnetic fields, Planets
S. Sh Shamukhamedova has written: 'V poiskakh ideala' -- subject(s): Criticism and interpretation, Religion
something soccer
sh*t
Sh-say-dough.
The letter "s" makes the "sh" sound in the word "permission."
Fur-rend-sh-ip