About the other posters, The pronunciation of it as Zoth isn't necessarily the biblical pronunciation since the 'Begedkefet' pronunciation came into existence during the second temple period, meaning that before that it was pronounced as Zot. A more accurate term for this pronunciation would be Tiberian Hebrew.
Many Ashkenazic Hebrew speakers pronounce the soft Tav as /th/, the pronunciation of it as /s/ originally came as a substitution.
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JUST ZOT. Even though you read from the Bible you You have to say ZOT.
Zot
About the other posters, The pronunciation of it as Zoth isn't necessarily the biblical pronunciation since the 'Begedkefet' pronunciation came into existence during the second temple period, meaning that before that it was pronounced as Zot. A more accurate term for this pronunciation would be Tiberian Hebrew.
Many Ashkenazic Hebrew speakers pronounce the soft Tav as /th/, the pronunciation of it as /s/ originally came as a substitution.
In modern Israeli Hebrew and in sephardic hebrew it would be pronounced "zoht."
In classical/biblical Hebrew and mizrahi Hebrew it is pronounced "zohth" with the "th" as in tooTH.
In Ashkenazic Hebrew it is pronounced "Zohs/zois".
very carefully