Or the rap artist “Jay-Zed”?
We always say “Zee Zee Top” - I think there’s a sort of unspoken acceptance that they’ve earnt it. But you sometimes hear people say “Jay-Zed”, normally as a bit of gentle mockery.
Jay-Zed as a joke is definitely something I’ve done.
Along with Thirty Pence
Feat. The Dogg Stone
I like to say Bradley Pitt.
Along with Thirty Pence
Ugh, double post
This is the most British thing I’ve ever heard.
Ah, so I’m guessing it wasn’t “Dragon Ball Zed” either, then.
I guess that makes sense, the Rush song doesn’t become YYZee in the US (mostly).
Grew up in South Africa (British English) and we always said “Dragonball Zee”
Brit here, I’ve heard both but DBZee is the most common.
It is in french. In the intro song it sounds like they sing “dragon boule zedde”.
Boule (kind of ) being pronounced as “bool” ( from boolean )
Imagine if the whole alphabet was like zed instead of like zee:
a bed ced ded ed f ged h i j k l m n o ped q r s ted u ved w x y zed
ged
Is this pronounced ‘ged’ or ‘ged’?
Yes
I… unironically don’t hate this!
I come from a “zed” country but we normally use the pronunciation of the people/creators.
So if I were reading the name “Jay-Z” for the first time and had never heard of him, I would think it was pronounced Jay-Zed or maybe Jays, but when I heard his name said by others I mentally adjusted it to Jay Zee.
I had ties to both Zee and Zed-speakers growing up, but in my experience, Zee and Zed can be used somewhat interchangeably, even across the pond. This might be in order to account for names (like Z Z Top and Jay Z), puns (such as La-Z for lazy) or even ease of pronounciation - when playing CSGO, I’ve heard Americans refer to the CZ-75 as Cee-Zed-Seventy-Five, because they found it weird to switch between the cee, zee and seven sounds, but I’m not sure how common this is.
CeeZee SeventyFive is easy to say, it even rhymes at the starting bit
a lot of people do say Jay Zed, but knowingly tounge in cheek in my experience
Asking the real questions.
… and I hope to the gods it’s Jay-Zed
“Find out next time, on Dragon Ball Zed”
This is correct. ;)
As a Canadian it really depends whether I say Zee or Zed. Looking online I was surprised to see that it has apparently been Zed in Canada for a long time, but I distinctly recall being raised on Zee until about the mid 2000s then everywhere in the curriculum it was Zed and I started hearing it more. Probably the biggest influence on whether I say Zee or Zed just depends on pop norms, and what sounds better.
Some examples:
- Zee Zee Top, obviously
- Jay Zee
- 350Zed and 370Zed (in reference to Nissan’s sportscar models, this actually changed for me over time, for the longest time I would say 350Zee or 370Zee, but when referring to the model broadly, it’s always Zee Cars, or for the classic model, it’s Fairlady Zee. Fairlady Zed just sounds awful)
- Day-Zee (the movie and video game)
- Dragon Ball Zee (ALWAYS, Dragon Ball Zed would be madness, I’ve never even considered saying Zed here, perhaps because I encountered it more in my Zee prevalent childhood)
- Zed-DX (the Acura)
- BMW Zed4
- La-Zee-boy (the sofas, obviously, ruins the pun otherwise)
- Alfa Romeo SZed (another car, it seems any time it is separate letters or a series of letter making up a name it’s virtually always Zed)
- ABC song, is always Zee for me, but I’ve heard others say Zed her often. To me it’s weird because otherwise it doesn’t rhyme with “next time won’t you sing with me”. Oddly if you asked me to say the alphabet backwards though, my first instinct would also be Zee.
- the phrase “from A to Zee”
- If you asked me what the last letter of the alphabet is, or to spell Zebra, I would say Zee, it seems when referring to the letter alone I pretty consistently use Zee
- I just asked my wife to spell Zebra and she said Zee though
At least the British and Americans are consistent, I don’t even know what the heck I’m doing here!
Day-Zee (the movie and video game)
This one is kind of fascinating to me, because even being from the US, I feel like Zed works better when it’s zombie-related. Probably both due to Shaun of the Dead (“Not using the Zed word!”), and because that makes it rhyme with “dead”.
I don’t think I’ll ever get Zedbra or Lay-Zed-Boy out of my head now. I love it.