 How do you pronounce the following words? Do you say beer, hair, or sure? Well, if you do, then you come close to received pronunciation and do not have to watch this micro lecture. Do you say beer, hair, or sure? Then you use some sort of North American accent and do not have to bother either. But if you say beer, hair, or sure, then you have a strong German accent and might be interested in getting rid of it. So what happens when Germans say beer instead of beer? The problem is that these words all end on orthographical R or RE. And in German such words are realized either by means of an unstressed low vowel as in mutter or by means of a down gliding diphthong as in beer, mere, or natura. In received pronunciation by contrast, the final R is either realized by a schwa as in mother or by an in gliding diphthong as in beer, hair, and sure. And in some special cases by a mid-high vowel as in sir or her. This difference between received pronunciation and German can only be avoided through intensive pronunciation training by permanently reminding oneself if there is a final orthographical R in written English, use a final schwa in pronunciation either unstressed in isolation or as an offset of an in gliding diphthong. This shouldn't be too problematic for Germans at all since the schwa is used in German too in words like Flieger or in plural forms like Hunde, Kühe, and so on. Take the following present-day English sentence to practice. There sure, their beer was under her chair and avoid lowering the schwa. I hope my advice helps and you will no longer find it difficult to produce present-day English words ending on orthographical R.