It's a z sound as for most internal s (e.g. rose, raisin, pose, ...).
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."
S and (in Latin American Spanish) Z and soft C.
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.