there
/ᴛʜâr/
adverb
- At or in that place. sit over there.
- To, into, or toward that place. wouldn't go there again.
- At that stage, moment, or point. Stop there before you make any more mistakes.
Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › pronunciation › english › there
THERE | Pronunciation in English
THERE pronunciation. How to say THERE. Listen to the audio pronunciation in English. Learn more.
Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › pronunciation › english › there-s
THERE’S | Pronunciation in English
THERE’S pronunciation. How to say THERE’S. Listen to the audio pronunciation in English. Learn more.
Videos
00:24
How to Pronounce There - YouTube
00:56
How to pronounce "there" they're" and "their" #shorts - YouTube
12:02
the 4 WAYS to pronounce 'there' correctly - there pronunciation ...
03:11
There, Their, They're Pronunciation and Difference | Learn with ...
00:29
How to pronounce 'there', 'their' and 'they're' in English ...
Reddit
reddit.com › r/englishlearning › "there" and "their" pronunciation difference
r/EnglishLearning on Reddit: "There" and "their" pronunciation difference
April 2, 2024 -
Somebody told me today that these two are homophones. You must be kidding me. I consider myself pretty well-versed in many varieties of English, but would never consider them homophones. Is "ei" in "their" really not pronounced as /eɪ/ (like ate, fame), but just as flat /ɛ/?
Top answer 1 of 5
14
There, Their, and They’re are all homophones. I sort of understand what you’re saying about making your pronunciation less “flat”, but this would be considered an accent to me and different English regions would have this trait to varying degrees but most likely still uniform in their pronunciation of the three homophones. Another common set of three homophones is to, too, and two.
2 of 5
7
It's accent related. You may find southern USA people saying them differently, but the phonetics are essentially identical, and without the entire sentence or a physical acknowledgement for context, a single word is useless to us.
ELSA
elsaspeak.com › en › learn-english › how-to-pronounce › there
How to Pronounce THERE in American English | ELSA Speak
Practice pronunciation of the word there with ELSA advanced technology and say there like Americans.
Forvo
forvo.com › word › there're
there're pronunciation: How to pronounce there're in English
Pronunciation guide: Learn how to pronounce there're in English with native pronunciation. there're translation and audio pronunciation
Forvo
forvo.com › word › there_are
there are pronunciation: How to pronounce there are in English
Pronunciation guide: Learn how to pronounce there are in English with native pronunciation. there are translation and audio pronunciation
Encyclopedia Britannica
britannica.com › dictionary › eb › audio
How to Pronounce there - (Audio) | Britannica Dictionary
Meta description: Hear the pronunciation of there in American English, spoken by real native speakers. From North America's leading language experts, Britannica Dictionary
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com › definition › english › there_1
there adverb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com
There you go again—jumping to conclusions. See there in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee there in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English · Check pronunciation: there · All matches · there · exclamation · out-there · adjective ·
Reddit
reddit.com › r/englishlearning › can we pronounce "there" as "theur" in british english?
r/EnglishLearning on Reddit: Can we pronounce "there" as "theur" in British English?
March 15, 2022 -
Can we pronounce "there" as "theur" in British English? I checked on the net and "theuh" is correct. However, is "theur" (the 'r' sound) wrong?
Top answer 1 of 3
6
I'm not really sure what you mean by "theur" or "theuh". In Southern Standard British English, 'there' is pronounced /ðeə/. If you don't know the IPA, that's "th + air". What sound is "euh" or "eur"? Do you have an example of where else it's used?
2 of 3
2
People in Britain have a huge range of accents, so they would pronounce "there" in various ways. The way that you have written it does not really indicate a specific pronunciation, so the answer could be yes for some people and no for others.
Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › pronunciation › english › their
THEIR | Pronunciation in English
THEIR pronunciation. How to say THEIR. Listen to the audio pronunciation in English. Learn more.
Wiktionary
en.wiktionary.org › wiki › there
there - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English there, ther, thare, thar, thore, from Old English þēr, þǣr, þār (“there; at that place”), from Proto-West Germanic *þār, from Proto-Germanic *þar (“at that place; there”), from Proto-Indo-European *tó-r (“there”), from demonstrative pronominal base *to- (“the, that”) + adverbial suffix *-r.
SHABDKOSH
shabdkosh.com › pronunciation › english › there
there - How to pronounce there in English
Pronunciation Dictionary - How to say 'there' in English? Learn spoken pronunciation of 'there' in multiple accent in pronunciation dictionary, translation, pronunciation, synonyms and definitions of 'there' in the English and Hindi reference.
Oxford English Dictionary
oed.com › dictionary › there_adv
there, adv., n., & int. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
new or updated pronunciations (transcriptions and audio files); new or revised etymological information and improved coverage of variant spellings; new senses or phrases added in print and online updates since OED2 (1989). Revisions and additions of this kind were last incorporated into there, adv., n., & int. in December 2025. ... View there, adv. (a., n.) in OED Second Edition ... Oxford English Dictionary, “,” , .
WordReference
forum.wordreference.com › english only › english only
(BE) there're vs. there (AE) - pronunciation | WordReference Forums
November 19, 2019 - I just watched a video on YT where a Canadian said the never uses 'there are' in everyday speech, because he would have to contract it to "there're" and that would make its pronunciation awkward, meaning he would have to say two 'r' sounds in a row. So he always says "there's" no matter if the noun is singular or plural. Then I thought a BE speaker would read just one 'r' in that contracted form, but looks like you would still pronounce neither of the two R's. ... English - U.S.