Chapter 15 – Food, Taste, and Preferences
Unit 4 — Grammar Focus
Likes and Dislikes
In Nepali, likes and dislikes are most commonly expressed using the verb phrase मन पर्छ (man parcha) for “like” and मन पर्दैन (man pardaina) for “don’t like.”
Literally, मन पर्नु (man parnu) means “to be pleasing to the mind/heart,” so preference is expressed as an experience rather than an action performed by the subject.
Because of this structure, the person who experiences the feeling is typically marked with –लाई (–lāī), while the thing liked or disliked functions as the grammatical subject.
Table 15.4.1 – Likes/dislikes in the present: मन पर्छ / मन पर्दैन (man parchha / man pardaina)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| मलाई चिया मन पर्छ। | malāī ciyā man parcha. | I like tea. |
| मलाई कफी मन पर्दैन। | malāī kaphī man pardaina. | I don’t like coffee. |
| उहाँलाई मोमो मन पर्छ। | uhā̃lāī momo man parcha. | He/She likes momo. |
| उहाँलाई पिरो मन पर्दैन। | uhā̃lāī piro man pardaina. | He/She doesn’t like spicy food. |
| तपाईंलाई दाल-भात मन पर्छ। | tapāī̃lāī dālbhāt man parcha. | You like daal-bhaat. |
| तपाईंलाई दाल-भात मन पर्दैन। | tapāī̃lāī dālbhāt man pardaina. | You don’t like daal-bhaat. |
Past Preference (मन पर्यो / मन परेन) (man paryo / man parena)
When expressing preference in the past—especially after experiencing something such as tasting food, watching a movie, or visiting a place—Nepali uses the forms मन पर्यो (man paryo) for “liked” and मन परेन (man parena) for “didn’t like.”
This maintains the same experiential structure as the present tense. The meaning is still “something was pleasing/unpleasing,” but now located in the past.
As with the present form, the experiencer (the person who felt the reaction) is usually marked with –लाई (–lāī), while the thing liked or disliked remains the grammatical subject.
Table 15.4.2 – Past preference: मन पर्यो / मन परेन (man paryo / man parena)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| मलाई चिया मन पर्यो। | malāī ciyā man paryo. | I liked the tea. |
| मलाई कफी मन परेन। | malāī kaphī man parena. | I didn’t like the coffee. |
| उहाँलाई मोमो मन पर्यो। | uhā̃lāī momo man paryo. | He/She liked momo. |
| उहाँलाई पिरो मन परेन। | uhā̃lāī piro man parena. | He/She didn’t like spicy food. |
| तपाईंलाई दाल-भात मन पर्यो। | tapāī̃lāī dālbhāt man paryo. | You liked daal-bhaat. |
| तपाईंलाई दाल-भात मन परेन। | tapāī̃lāī dālbhāt man parena. | You didn’t like daal-bhaat. |
Table 15.4.3 – Common questions for preferences (present and past)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| तपाईंलाई के मन पर्छ? | tapāī̃lāī ke man parcha? | What do you like? |
| तपाईंलाई चिया मन पर्छ? | tapāī̃lāī ciyā man parcha? | Do you like tea? |
| तपाईंलाई पिरो मन पर्छ? | tapāī̃lāī piro man parcha? | Do you like spicy food? |
| तपाईंलाई चिया मन पर्यो? | tapāī̃lāī ciyā man paryo? | Did you like the tea? |
| तपाईंलाई मोमो मन परेन? | tapāī̃lāī momo man parena? | Didn’t you like the momo? |
Table 15.4.4 – Short answers for preferences
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| हो, मलाई मन पर्छ। | ho, malāī man parcha. | Yes, I do. |
| होइन, मलाई मन पर्दैन। | hoina, malāī man pardaina. | No, I don’t. |
| हो, मलाई मन पर्यो। | ho, malāī man paryo. | Yes, I liked it. |
| होइन, मलाई मन परेन। | hoina, malāī man parena. | No, I didn’t like it. |
Alternative Expression: मन पराउनु (man parāunu)
Although everyday Nepali most commonly uses the experiencer pattern मलाई … मन पर्छ (malāī … man parchha), you may also encounter the verb मन पराउनु (man parāunu, “to like”), especially in written Nepali or more careful/formal speech.
Unlike the experiencer construction, मन पराउनु (man parāunu) behaves more like a typical transitive verb. The person who likes something appears as the grammatical subject, which makes the structure closer to English.
Table 15.4.5 – Alternative “like” verb (more subject-style): present
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| म पहेंलो रङ मन पराउँछु। | ma pahẽlo raṅ man parāũchu. | I like the color yellow. |
| उहाँ हरियो रङ मन पराउनुहुन्छ। | uhā̃ hariyo raṅ man parāunuhuncha. | He/She likes the color green. |
Table 15.4.6 – मन पराउनु (man parāunu) in the past: parāẽ / parāunubhayo
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| मैले पहेंलो रङ मन पराएँ। | maile pahẽlo raṅ man parāẽ. | I liked the color yellow. |
| उहाँले हरियो रङ मन पराउनुभयो। | uhā̃le hariyo raṅ man parāunubhayo. | He/She liked the color green. |
Need/Want and Availability
In Nepali, meanings such as “need/want (right now)” and “availability / ability to obtain something” are commonly expressed in an impersonal (passive-like) structure.
Instead of saying “I need X” as a subject-based action, Nepali typically frames it as:
-
“X is needed for me”
-
“X is available/obtainable (for me)”
Because of this structure, the thing being needed or available functions like the grammatical subject, while the person who needs or receives it is marked with –लाई (–lāī).
Core verbs
-
चाहिनु (cāhinu) — “to be needed / wanted”
-
पाइनु (pāinu) — “to be available / obtainable / get (something)”
These verbs often appear in forms like:
-
चाहिन्छ (cāhincha) — is needed / want
-
पाइन्छ (pāincha) — is available / can be obtained
1) चाहिन्छ / चाहिँदैन (cāhincha / cāhĩdaina)
चाहिन्छ (cāhincha) “is needed / is wanted” and चाहिँदैन (cāhĩdaina) “is not needed / is not wanted” are the most practical forms for stating what you want or need in the immediate situation.
They are especially common in cafés and restaurants because they express a present request (what you want right now), not a general preference.
Grammar pattern
This is an impersonal construction:
-
The item behaves like the subject-like element
-
The person is marked with –लाई (–lāī)
For learners, the key contrast is simple: use चाहिन्छ / चाहिँदैन for “want/need now,” and use मन पर्छ / मन पर्दैन for “like/dislike in general.”
Table 15.4.7 – Want/need now: चाहिन्छ / चाहिँदैन (cāhinchha / cāhĩdaina)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| मलाई पानी चाहिन्छ। | malāī pānī cāhincha. | I want/need water. |
| मलाई चिया चाहिन्छ। | malāī ciyā cāhincha. | I want tea (now). |
| मलाई कफी चाहिँदैन। | malāī kaphī cāhĩdaina. | I don’t want coffee (now). |
| अहिले मलाई मिठाई चाहिँदैन। | ahile malāī miṭhāī cāhĩdaina. | I don’t want sweets right now. |
Table 15.4.8 – Polite want/need questions
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| तपाईंलाई के चाहिन्छ? | tapāī̃lāī ke cāhincha? | What do you want/need? |
| तपाईंलाई पानी चाहिन्छ? | tapāī̃lāī pānī cāhincha? | Do you want water? |
| अरू केही चाहिन्छ? | arū kehi cāhincha? | Anything else? |
2) पाइन्छ / पाइँदैन (pāincha / pāĩdaina)
पाइन्छ (pāincha) means “is obtainable / is available,” and पाइँदैन (pāĩdaina) means “is not obtainable / is not available.” These are the most common expressions for availability in everyday settings such as shops, cafés, restaurants, and services.
Instead of directly asking “Do you have X?”, Nepali often frames the question as whether something can be obtained at a place.
Grammar pattern
This is an impersonal construction:
-
The item acts like the subject-like element
-
The place (often यहाँ (yahā̃) “here”) provides the location of availability
Practically: use पाइन्छ to confirm something is available to buy/order, and use पाइँदैन to understand or state that it is not available.
Table 15.4.9 – Availability: पाइन्छ / पाइँदैन (pāinchha / pāĩdaina)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| यहाँ मोमो पाइन्छ। | yahā̃ momo pāincha. | Momo is available here. |
| यहाँ दूध चिया पाइन्छ। | yahā̃ dūdh ciyā pāincha. | Milk tea is available here. |
| यहाँ कालो कफी पाइन्छ? | yahā̃ kālo kaphī pāincha? | Is black coffee available here? / Can you get black coffee here? |
| यहाँ जुस पाइँदैन। | yahā̃ jus pāĩdaina. | Juice isn’t available here. |
3) “Available” vs. “Can you get…?”
Literally, पाइन्छ (pāincha) means “is found / is available / can be obtained.” In natural English, this is often translated as “you can get …,” because English tends to express availability from the customer’s perspective.
Nepali, however, does not explicitly mention the person doing the action. The meaning is impersonal and general, so the “someone/you” interpretation is already understood from context.
Table 15.4.10 – Availability questions: kahā̃ pāincha? / … pāincha?
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| भ्यान्कुभरमा मोमो कहाँ पाइन्छ? | bhyānkubharmā momo kahā̃ pāincha? | Where can you get momo in Vancouver? |
| यहाँ कालो कफी पाइन्छ? | yahā̃ kālo kaphī pāincha? | Can you get black coffee here? / Is it available here? |
Asking Yes/No Questions with ki (“…or?”)
In Nepali, yes/no questions usually keep the same word order as statements. In speech, they are marked mainly by rising intonation at the end, while in writing the question mark (?) signals the interrogative form.
A very common feature of Nepali questions is the particle कि (ki), which literally means “or.” When used in questions, it creates a structure similar to “…or not?”, making the question more natural and conversational.
Basic use of ki
-
यहाँ पानी छ कि?
yahā̃ pānī cha ki?
“Is there water here (or not)?”
Explicit alternative form
You can also state both options directly:
-
हो कि होइन?
ho ki hoina?
“Is it or isn’t it?”
-
छ कि छैन?
cha ki chaina?
“Is there or isn’t there?”
Pragmatic note
Questions like:
-
यहाँ पानी छ कि?
yahā̃ pānī cha ki?
often carry an implied polite request or expectation, such as the speaker being interested in getting water if it is available.
Table 15.4.11 – Yes/no questions with कि (ki)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English | Pattern type |
|---|---|---|---|
| यो किताब हो? | yo kitāb ho? | Is this a book? | Simple question with ho |
| यो किताब हो कि? | yo kitāb ho ki? | Is this a book (or not)? | With ki |
| यो किताब हो कि होइन? | yo kitāb ho ki hoina? | Is this a book or not? | “or not” (explicit) |
| यहाँ पानी छ? | yahā̃ pānī cha? | Is there water here? | Simple question with chha |
| यहाँ पानी छ कि? | yahā̃ pānī cha ki? | Is there water here (or not)? | With ki |
| यहाँ पानी छ कि छैन? | yahā̃ pānī cha ki chaina? | Is there water here or not? | “or not” (explicit) |
Saying “because” with kinabhane
In everyday Nepali, the most common way to say “because” is किनभने (kinabhane). It is used to introduce a reason or explanation, especially in response to किन? (kina? “why?”).
Basic pattern
-
किन? (kina?) — “why?”
-
किनभने + कारण (kinabhane + kāraṇ) — “because + reason”
Examples
-
किन आउनुभएन?
kina āunubhaena?
“Why didn’t you come?”
-
किनभने म बिरामी थिएँ।
kinabhane ma birāmī thiẽ.
“Because I was sick.”
Alternative form
A more formal or written equivalent is:
-
किनकि (kinki) — “because”
Key idea
-
किनभने (kinabhane) = everyday spoken “because”
-
किनकि (kinaki) = more formal/written “because”
The structure is straightforward: reason follows किनभने (kinabhane) without changing word order.
Table 15.4.12 – Giving reasons with किनभने (kinabhane)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English |
|---|---|---|
| मलाई दूध चिया मन पर्छ, किनभने यो मीठो हुन्छ। | malāī dūdh ciyā man parcha, kinabhane yo mīṭho huncha. | I like milk tea because it is tasty/sweet. |
| मलाई कालो कफी मन पर्दैन, किनभने यो तितो हुन्छ। | malāī kālo kaphī man pardaina, kinabhane yo tito huncha. | I don’t like black coffee because it is bitter. |
| मलाई मोमो मन पर्छ, किनभने यो धेरै स्वादिलो हुन्छ। | malāī momo man parcha, kinabhane yo dherai swādilo huncha. | I like momo because it is very delicious. |
| मलाई केक मन पर्छ, किनभने यो गुलियो हुन्छ। | malāī kek man parcha, kinabhane yo guliyo huncha. | I like cake because it is sweet. |