It is zeta, and you pronounce it 'séh tah.'
(The pronunciation in Spain is closer to th for Z and D than in Latin America.)
In Castilian Spanish, when or come after a or , as in the word "once", the letter becomes a soft C, and is pronounced like a in english.fourlanguages.com
'McKenzie', written, a Spanish-speaker would pronounce: macEnthee-ay To enable a Spanish-speaker to pronounce it in the British way, write: 'macensi', with an accent over the 'e'. It will still have an 's' sound instead of the 'z'; but that is impossible to produce from the Spanish alphabet.
In Castilian Spanish, when or come after a or , as in the word "once", the letter becomes a soft C, and is pronounced like a in english.fourlanguages.com
'Dulce de azúcar' is how you say 'fudge' in Spanish. If you want to pronounce it just simply say a 'th' instead of the 'z'!
like this; A-Z-Z-A-R-O
There are not any letters z in this sentence, but there are two places where you pronounce /z/: words and friends. You pronounce them as /z/ because d is a voiced sound.
the ze zeo is used in Spain to differentiate the s and z sounds. So they pronounce the z sound as a th sound. As in zapatos would be pronounced thapatos
"zed"
Z rel to
To pronounce Tristan as it is in Spanish, try TREE-stahn. (Note: r is rolled in Spanish.)
gon-z-ay-a
Frreh-z