Zed Vs. Zee (2024)

What is black and white and red all over?

If you said “a sunburned zebra,” you would be correct! But if you said “zee-brah” instead of “zeb-rah,”would you still be right? That depends on where in the world you are.

“Zebra” can be pronounced both ways, just like the letter “Z” can be pronounced as either “Zed” or “Zee.” Let’s explore how and why.

Zed

Of the two different pronunciations, zed is the eldest. It comes from the Greek and Latin“zeta,” meaning “z,” and the French word for the same letter, “zède.”

Zed was first used to refer to the last letter of the English alphabet in the 12th century. It appeared in print for the first time in the early 1400s in a Middle English manuscript.

In the United Kingdom and countries where Commonwealth English is used, like Australia, India, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Africa, zed is the pronunciation for the letter “z.”

Although Canada is also a commonwealth nation, Canadian English is influenced by both British and American English. Here, both zee and zed are considered acceptable pronunciations, although the latter is far more common.

Related Lesson

Zed Vs. Zee (1)

The Alphabet Song with Zed: Capital Letters

In this Phonics video, students learn and practice the capital letters of the English alphabet, ending in zed. They'll listen to "The Alphabet Song" and try singing along. This video is also available with lowercase letters.

Zee

Zee, on the other hand, entered English as a 17th century variant of zed. Its first known appearance is in the 1677 textbook, A New Spelling Book by British Nonconformist minister and teacher, Thomas Lye. The book eventually made its way to the British colonies in America.

A variety of pronunciations continued to be used in the US up until 1828, when famed lexicographer Noah Webster confirmed that“it is pronounced zee” in An American Dictionary of the English Language.

This pronunciation was thought to be influenced by the bee, cee, dee, eee pattern of the rest of the alphabet. When the “Alphabet Song” was copyrighted in Boston in 1835, "zee" was used to rhyme with "me." Since then, zee has became the American standard.

…W, X, Y, and Z(ee)
Now I know my ABCs
Next time, won't you sing with me

—The Alphabet Song

Related Lesson

Zed Vs. Zee (2)

The Alphabet Song: Capital Letters

In this Phonics video, students learn and practice the capital letters of the English alphabet, ending in zee. They'll listen to "The Alphabet Song" and try singing along. This video is also available for lowercase letters.

Zed Vs. Zee (2024)

FAQs

Zed Vs. Zee? ›

Regardless of which pronunciation you use, people will usually know which letter you're referring to! But, keep in mind that zed is technically the correct version in England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Canada, India, Australia, and New Zealand, and zee is technically correct in the United States.

Does Canada say Zee or Zed? ›

Although Canadian English normally uses American vocabulary, zed remained common in Canadian English until the present day... ... except many young people in Southern Ontario are saying zee more than zed, possibly because of Sesame Street and the alphabet song.

Is it zed or zee in Australia? ›

In most English-speaking countries, including Australia, Canada, India, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa and the United Kingdom, the letter's name is zed /zɛd/, reflecting its derivation from the Greek letter zeta (this dates to Latin, which borrowed Y and Z from Greek), but in American English its name is zee /ziː/, ...

Why do British people say leftenant? ›

How Language is spoken and how it is written is constantly evolving. The reason why people from the commonwealth say "lef-tenant" can probably be attributed to the U being misread as a V during the middle ages, which in turn developed into and F sound.

Is the L silent in almonds? ›

If an “L” is found towards the end of the word, before the letters “f,” “v”, “k” and “m,” but after the letter “a,” then it's usually silent (behalf, calve, walk, almond). In many of these instances, the silent L lengthens the previous vowel sound, which gives the slight impression of the “L” /l/ sound.

Do Italians say Zee or Zed? ›

Matteo gets into detail on the hard 'z' and the soft 'z. ' Both are pronounced 'zed' in Italian, just as a heads up so you aren't confused right off the bat. It may be the last letter of the alphabet but the 'Z' is mighty important in Italian.

Do Irish say Zee or Zed? ›

Zed is widely known to be used in British English. But it's also used in almost every English-speaking country. In England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Australia, India, Canada (usually), and New Zealand, Z is pronounced as zed. It's derived from the Greek letter zeta.

How do Africans pronounce z? ›

It's really just in the United States where “zee” is more common and taught in schools. Zed: United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, Zimbabwe, (their country starts with the letter after all), Jamaica, India, Pakistan, etc, etc.

Do Americans say Zee or zed? ›

Zee is the American way of saying the letter z. Zed is the British way. Neither is right or wrong, and nobody is ignorant for pronouncing z the way they do. The zed pronunciation is older, and it more closely resembles the Greek letter, zeta, from which the English letter is derived.

What letter was removed from the English alphabet? ›

Why did Z get removed from the alphabet? Around 300 BC, the Roman Censor Appius Claudius Caecus removed Z from the alphabet. His justification was that Z had become archaic: the pronunciation of /z/ had become /r/ by a process called rhotacism, rendering the letter Z useless.

Why is Z pronounced as g? ›

Why do some people pronounce letter "Z" with a "G" sound? In Nepali language and Hindi (Indian) language (most probably), there aren't alphabets that make the distinction between sounds /dʒ/ and /z/. Those sound are used interchangeably or rather indiscriminately.

When did Zed become Zee? ›

The pronunciation zee is a 17th-century variant of zed. The earliest citation is from a 1677 language textbook, A New Spelling Book by Thomas Lye, a Nonconformist minister and teacher in London, England.

Why do Brits pronounce H as Haitch? ›

But English being the perverse language that it is, there are of course exceptions to the rule – such as hour and honourable, and of course aitch as in H-bomb. In Britain, H apparently owes its “haitch” pronunciation to the Catholic Normans, who brought the old French word “hache” with them when they invaded in 1066.

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