Nuance & Usage
お茶 usually refers to Japanese green tea (緑茶 — ryokucha) by default, though it can mean tea in general. The お prefix makes it polite and is almost always used — saying just 茶 (cha) alone sounds rough or old-fashioned. お茶 is deeply tied to Japanese culture through 茶道 (sadou — tea ceremony). Common expressions: お茶を飲む (drink tea), お茶をする (have tea — implying a casual break), お茶を入れる (brew/make tea).
Common Mistakes
Learners sometimes drop the お, but お茶 is the standard form — 茶 alone sounds too casual or dialectal. Also, お茶をする doesn't just mean "to drink tea" — it often means "to take a break at a café" or "to hang out over drinks." For specific tea types: 紅茶 (koucha — black tea), 麦茶 (mugicha — barley tea), 抹茶 (matcha — powdered green tea).
Example Sentences (3)
お茶をどうぞ。
おちゃをどうぞ。
Please have some tea.
午後、お茶しませんか?
ごご、おちゃしませんか?
Would you like to have tea in the afternoon?
日本ではお茶がとても人気です。
にほんではおちゃがとてもにんきです。
Tea is very popular in Japan.
Quick Quiz
Quick Quiz
N54 questionsTest your knowledge of お茶 with 4 different question types.
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