Some parts of the South, including the part of Kentucky I grew up in, "here" gets pronounced in the UK manner with the schwa and without the 'r' (and as two syllables), while "hear" gets pronounced in the US manner without the schwa but with the 'r'.

Answer from Sean Duggan on Stack Exchange
hear
/hîr/
intransitive verb
  1. To perceive (sound) by the ear.
    Can you hear the signal?
  2. To learn by hearing; be told by others.
    I heard she got married.
  3. To listen to (something) attentively or in an official capacity, as in a court.
    heard the last witness in the afternoon.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition. More at Wordnik
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Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › us › pronunciation › english › hear
How to pronounce HEAR in English
1 month ago - How to pronounce HEAR. How to say HEAR. Listen to the audio pronunciation in the Cambridge English Dictionary. Learn more.
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Encyclopedia Britannica
britannica.com › dictionary › eb › audio
How to Pronounce hear - (Audio) | Britannica Dictionary
Meta description: Hear the pronunciation of hear in American English, spoken by real native speakers. From North America's leading language experts, Britannica Dictionary
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IPA Reader
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IPA Reader
It makes it easy to actually hear how words are pronounced based on their phonetic spelling, without having to look up each character in the IPA chart and string the sounds together yourself.
Discussions

pronunciation - Do “here” and “hear” have the same phonetic transcription in the same country? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Is there any accent that makes a distinction when pronuncing “here” and “hear”? From Wiktionary: Here (UK) /hɪə(ɹ)/ (US) /hɪɹ/ Hear (UK) /hɪə(ɹ)/ (US) IPA: /hiːɹ/ So, according to that, US accent More on english.stackexchange.com
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January 31, 2012
Pronunciation of ‘hear’ in South African English and RP
Yes, some varieties of English use /j/ in hear. Welsh English, apparently. Can't remember which other varieties More on reddit.com
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November 8, 2021
pronunciation: here, hear, ear [rhyme?] | WordReference Forums
Hi, Do here, hear and ear rhyme? The WR dictionary tells me that all three words use short I sound . Thanks. More on forum.wordreference.com
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May 31, 2017
pronunciation - British politicians pronouncing "hear, hear" oddly - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
I'm an American living in California. I was recently watching a C-SPAN broadcast of a British Parliamentary debate about Mr. Trump (I assumed it's Parliament). A lot of men and women with tousled h... More on english.stackexchange.com
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March 1, 2017
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Wiktionary
en.wiktionary.org › wiki › hear
hear - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Cognate with Saterland Frisian heere (“to hear”), West Frisian hearre (“to hear”), Dutch horen (“to hear”), German hören (“to hear”), Danish and Norwegian Bokmål høre (“to hear”), Norwegian Nynorsk høyra (“to hear”), Swedish höra (“to hear”), Icelandic heyra (“to hear”), Ancient Greek ἀκούω (akoúō, “I hear”).
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Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › us › dictionary › english › hear
HEAR | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
November 5, 2025 - HEAR meaning: 1. to receive or become conscious of a sound using your ears: 2. to be told information about…. Learn more.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/linguistics › pronunciation of ‘hear’ in south african english and rp
r/linguistics on Reddit: Pronunciation of ‘hear’ in South African English and RP
November 8, 2021 -

I often hear ‘hear’ pronounced with a yod (“hjear” - sorry, not too familiar with IPA) in South African English. I think I’ve heard this in conservative RP occasionally as well (with a different vowel, obviously).

Is this an older feature of English that’s been lost? Is it just a development in these accents? Is it actually a feature of RP or have I misheard?

Thanks guys, appreciate your help.

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ELSA
elsaspeak.com › en › learn-english › how-to-pronounce › hear
How to Pronounce HEAR in American English | ELSA Speak
Practice pronunciation of the word hear with ELSA advanced technology and say hear like Americans.
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How to Pronounce
howtopronounce.com › home › hear
Hear Pronunciation
June 19, 2025 - How to say hear in English? Pronunciation of hear with 25 audio pronunciations, 20 synonyms, 1 meaning, 1 antonym, 27 sentences and more for hear.
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Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › dictionary › hear
HEAR Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1 week ago - Do you hear that music? I couldn't hear a word of what he said over all that noise. I thought I heard him leave. Would you turn the volume up a little? I can't hear. I heard her in concert a few years ago. Have you ever heard Wagner sung in English? The committee will hear witnesses today.
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HiNative
hinative.com › questions › 4618130
What is the difference between hear(pronunciation ...
September 1, 2017 - HiNative is a global Q&A platform where you can ask people from all over the world questions about language and culture. We support over 110 languages.
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YouGlish
youglish.com › pronounce › hear › english
Hear | 254826 pronunciations of Hear in English
Self-Record & Review: Record yourself saying 'hear' in sentences. Listen back to identify areas for improvement. YouTube Pronunciation Guides: Search YouTube for how to pronounce 'hear' in English.
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Dictionary
help.dictionary.com › frequently asked questions › how do i hear the pronunciation of a word on dictionary.com or thesaurus.com?
How Do I Hear the Pronunciation of a Word on Dictionary.com or Thesaurus.com? - Dictionary.com
July 2, 2025 - When you search for a word’s definition on Dictionary.com or Thesaurus.com, available audio pronunciations can be heard by clicking on the speaker icon, located next to the word.
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WordReference
forum.wordreference.com › english only › english only
pronunciation: here, hear, ear [rhyme?] | WordReference Forums
May 31, 2017 - There are no absolute rules about pronunciation in English and there is enormous regional variation. Often there are a number of acceptable correct ways to say something and a much larger number of ways to get it completely wrong. ... In my dialect of English (a mix of midwestern and southeastern, fairly close to Hollywood Standard American) the verb sound in "here" and "ear" and "hear" is the same as the verb sound in the first syllable of both "serious" and "Sirius," and also it's neither a long nor a short E sound, but distinct from either and somewhere in between.
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YouGlish
youglish.com › pronounce › hear › english › aus
Hear | 6297 pronunciations of Hear in Australian English
Self-record & review: Record yourself saying 'hear' in sentences. Listen back to identify areas for improvement. YouTube Pronunciation Guides: Search YouTube for how to pronounce 'hear' in English.
Top answer
1 of 4
6

The speaker featured at the referenced moment is Kirsten Oswald, a member of the Scottish National Party. Seated near her are other Scottish MPs such as Alex Salmond, the former leader of the Scottish National Party. It is this grouping of Scottish MPs who are calling out "hear, hear" in support of Ms Oswald, and it is the Scottish accent that gives rise to the unusual sounding pronunciation being noted in your question.

An English accent will pronounce hear, hear in a manner more familiar to American ears.

(The debate appear to be taking place in a committee room located in the Palace of Westminster.)

2 of 4
5

I think you are probably hearing a version with a semivowel /j/ followed by word-final schwa, which Geoff Lindsey says is a current variant of the "NEAR" vowel in British English. This would not be a speech impediment.

Lindsey's blog post The demise of ɪə as in NEAR (April 21, 2012) says

In the earlier standard/reference accent of British English, Received Pronunciation, words like NEAR contained a centring diphthong, ɪə. This was a vowel which glided from the lax quality ɪ to the quality ə within a single syllable. [...] Although British dictionaries still use “/ɪə/” in their transcriptions, a lax diphthong of this type is now rather old-fashioned.

Contemporary NEAR

In contemporary Standard Southern British (SSB), we hear tend to hear either

  1. a long pure vowel, the monophthong ɪː; or

  2. a form in which the tense FLEECE vowel is followed by schwa, which we could write as ɪjə or, with traditional symbols, as /iːə/; this form can plausibly be considered to comprise two syllables.

Many speakers use both forms. For such speakers, NEAR is what John Wells has termed varisyllabic, and the long monophthong in (1) can be thought of as derived from the disyllable in (2) by ‘smoothing’.

The blog post has a number of audio examples you can listen to.


Edit: I think the audio in the Youtube video linked to in the question does sound a bit like the sound file in Lindsey's blog post, although maybe some of the speakers also have final consonantal /r/. I can't exactly tell. The woman who is speaking most of the time in that section of the video certainly does have consonantal /r/ in this environment, since she seems to have a Scottish accent, but I don't know if all the other people saying "hear, hear" have the same accent she does.

A Scottish accent of course is not "southern British," but I think the / ɪjə/ pronunciation Lindsey mentions may exist to some extent outside of the South as well (or /ɪjər/ with a final consonantal /r/).