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Chapter 11 – Family and Relationships

Unit 4 — Grammar Focus

Interrogative pronoun –ko

को (ko) means “who?” in Nepali and is used to ask about a person’s identity (name, role, or relationship). These are typically identity questions (X = Y), so they use a copular verb (“to be”).

The form को (ko) does not change. Instead, the copula changes based on number and respect level (e.g., हो, हुन्, हुनुहुन्छ).

Table 11.4.1 – Interrogative pronoun को (ko): “who?” identity questions

Nepali Transliteration English
यो को हो? yo ko ho? Who is this?
त्यो को हो? tyo ko ho? Who is that?
उनीहरू को हुन्? unīharū ko hun? Who are they?
तपाईं को हुनुहुन्छ? tapāī̃ ko hunuhuncha? Who are you (polite)?
उहाँ को हुनुहुन्छ? uhā̃ ko hunuhuncha? Who is he/she (respectful)?

Compound Nouns in Nepali

A compound noun is formed when two nouns join together and behave like one noun with a single combined meaning. Nepali uses compound nouns very frequently in everyday speech, especially for family pairs and relationship sets, because they sound short and natural.

A simple learner rule is that the first noun introduces the pair, and the second noun completes it.

Table 11.4.2 – Common family/relationship compound nouns (N + N → one noun)

Parts Compound noun Transliteration Meaning
आमा + बुबा आमाबुबा āmābubā parents
दिदी + बहिनी दिदीबहिनी didībahinī sisters
दाइ + भाइ दाइभाइ dāibhāī brothers
काका + काकी काकाकाकी kākākākī uncle and aunt


A compound noun works like a single noun, so you add grammar endings to the whole unit (not to each part).

Table 11.4.3 – Compound nouns with case endings

Form Transliteration Meaning
आमाबुबाको āmābubāko parents’
आमाबुबासँग āmābubāsãga with (my) parents
आमाबुबालाई āmābubālāī to/for the parents


Polite Simple Present Verbs

To ask about what someone does now or usually does (work, study, teach, live), Nepali commonly uses polite/honorific present verb forms. These forms show respect and are used with उहाँ (uhā̃) “he/she (hon.)” and, in this chapter, also with उहाँहरू (uhā̃harū) “they (hon.)” using the same verb form for simplicity.

Key idea

  • Honorific present verbs often end in –नुहुन्छ (–nuhuncha).

Table 11.4.4 – Common polite simple present verbs (–नुहुन्छ forms)

Verb Transliteration English Meaning
गर्नुहुन्छ garnuhuncha do / work
पढ्नुहुन्छ paḍhnuhuncha study / read
पढाउनुहुन्छ paḍhāunuhuncha teach
बस्नुहुन्छ basnuhuncha live / stay


Table 11.4.5 – Asking polite questions about work/study/teaching/living

What you want to ask Polite Question (Nepali) Transliteration English Translation
work/job उहाँ के काम गर्नुहुन्छ? uhā̃ ke kām garnuhuncha? What does he/she do for work?
study उहाँ के पढ्नुहुन्छ? uhā̃ ke paḍhnuhuncha? What does he/she study?
teach (subject) उहाँ कुन विषय पढाउनुहुन्छ? uhā̃ kun wiṣaya paḍhāunuhuncha? What subject does he/she teach?
live now उहाँ अहिले कहाँ बस्नुहुन्छ? uhā̃ ahile kahā̃ basnuhuncha? Where does he/she live now?


Table 11.4.6 – Giving polite answers about work/study/teaching/living

What you want to say Polite Answer (Nepali) Transliteration English Translation
work उहाँ कार्यालयमा काम गर्नुहुन्छ। uhā̃ kāryālaymā kām garnuhuncha. He/She works in an office.
study उहाँ विज्ञान पढ्नुहुन्छ। uhā̃ wijñān paḍhnuhuncha. He/She studies science.
teach उहाँ गणित पढाउनुहुन्छ। uhā̃ gaṇit paḍhāunuhuncha. He/She teaches math.
live उहाँ क्यानाडामा बस्नुहुन्छ। uhā̃ kyānāḍāmā basnuhuncha. He/She lives in Canada.


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(DRAFT) Nepali language test Copyright © by Binod Shrestha; Mark Turin; and Salina Dolmo Lama is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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