Ga-looWorksheet Generator for SLPs

Final R Phrases for Speech Therapy

20 short phrases for practicing /r/ in the final position — the bridge between single words and sentences. Every phrase is pronunciation-checked and contains no competing sounds, so each repetition stays on target.

Why phrase-level practice matters

Once a sound is solid in single words, phrases add the first layer of difficulty: the target now survives next to other words, but the utterance is still short enough to self-monitor. Skipping straight from words to conversation is where many targets fall apart.

Use a small set per session and keep the pace slow at first. When accuracy is high across two or three sessions, the same phrases stretch into sentences — the next level below.

All verified Final R phrases

  • a soft chair1× /r/
  • that big bear1× /r/
  • a hot jar1× /r/
  • my best ear1× /r/
  • big brown deer1× /r/
  • my thin hair1× /r/
  • four fat mice1× /r/
  • a good cure1× /r/
  • more hot soup1× /r/
  • a tiny pear1× /r/
  • a dark core1× /r/
  • that fair game1× /r/
  • my dear cat1× /r/
  • a big gear1× /r/
  • my soft chair1× /r/
  • that fast car1× /r/
  • a sad bear1× /r/
  • my pink ear1× /r/
  • a neat pair1× /r/
  • four big deer2× /r/

Every line is checked with the CMU Pronouncing Dictionary: each word's pronunciation is verified, and the target sound is confirmed in the final position.

Need this practice on a printable worksheet?

Ga-loo builds a checked, print-ready PDF for a chosen sound, word position, age, and theme — every word verified before you print.

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Frequently asked questions

What are Final R phrases?
Short 2–4 word phrases where /r/ appears in the final position of a word — for example: “a soft chair”, “that big bear”. They are the practice step between single words and full sentences.
Why do these phrases avoid competing sounds?
Sounds that children commonly confuse with the target (like /w/ for /r/) can undo a fragile new skill. At phrase level we keep practice clean; competing sounds return naturally at sentence level.
When should a child move from words to phrases?
A common rule of thumb is high accuracy (about 80–90%) at word level across a few sessions. The SLP guiding the child makes the call — this list does not replace clinical judgment.
Can I get these phrases on a printable worksheet?
Yes. Ga-loo generates printable articulation worksheets for /r/ with a chosen age range and theme, and phonetically checks every word before building the PDF.