Place your tongue tip near the roof of your mouth behind your top teeth. Push air through the narrow gap. No voicing.

Americans pronounce severe as suh-VEER (/səˈvɪr/). Stress falls on the second syllable — keep everything else short and quick. You'll hear it in sentences like "The severe peer pressure was sincere" or "Climate change is causing more frequent and severe weather events" — more examples below.
Record yourself saying "severe" and play it back. The mic stays on your device — nothing's uploaded.
2 syllables, 4 sounds. Tap a syllable to jump to its row, then explore each sound's mouth shape and how it's made.
Click any sentence to see the full breakdown — every link, every reduction, every flap-T.
The textbook way isn't wrong — it's just not how anyone actually says it.
Stress falls on the second syllable, not the others. Stretch VEER — keep everything else short and quick.
Don't pronounce the first syllable too fully. The unstressed syllable reduces to a schwa — the lazy "uh" sound — in casual speech.
Americans use a relaxed retroflex R — the tongue curls back rather than rolling. The R is one continuous sound with the vowel before it, not two separate sounds.