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Chapter 13 – Daily Routines

Unit 2 — Cultural Insight

Glasses of Nepali milk tea on a woven mat, with a newspaper nearby.
Glasses of tea in Bhaktapur, Nepal. Photo by Suraj Shakya (Pexels).

Chiyāpasal: The Everyday Conversation Hub

One of the clearest ways to see how daily routine and social life blend in Nepal is through tea culture. Tea is more than a drink. It is a social habit. The tea shop or tea stall, चिया पसल (ciyā pasal), often functions as an informal meeting place.

Friends, coworkers, and neighbours may stop by early in the morning before work or school. They may return again in the afternoon for a short break. People sometimes call this relaxed, unplanned chatting चिया गफ (ciyā gaph, “tea talk”). In चिया गफ (ciyā gaph), casual conversation and friendly gossip are just as important as the tea itself.

In this sense, a चियापसल (ciyā pasal) works like a small “social office.” It is a place to pause, exchange small news, and stay connected through quick, familiar interactions.

Tea Shops as Community Spaces

In many neighbourhoods, especially in Kathmandu and other busy towns, tea stalls also act as informal community noticeboards. Students, shopkeepers, office workers, drivers, and neighbours drop in not only for tea but also for local updates.

People may talk about who is around, who is going where, what is open, and what is happening nearby. A single newspaper headline or phone notification can easily turn small talk into a wider conversation about community issues, daily routines, or current events.

Why This Matters for Learners

For learners, चिया गफ (ciyā gaph) is a useful cultural lens because it naturally uses high-frequency, everyday Nepali. It includes time expressions, routine verbs, frequency words such as “usually” and “sometimes,” and polite ways of talking about people and their plans.

Compared with many North American or European cafés, where conversations may be more private or planned, a Nepali चियापसल (ciyā pasal) is often open, lively, and deeply social. It is one of the most authentic places to hear natural Nepali interaction.

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Introduction to the Nepali Language Copyright © 2026 by Binod Shrestha; Salina Dolmo Lama; Mark Turin is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.