The Japanese word for "tea house" is 茶屋 (chaya).
茶 (cha) - tea
屋 (ya) - house; shop
You can say it ocha
In a Japanese tea ceremony you are either invited by the tea master or someone arranges a ceremony at a tea house and they invite you as a guest. However at events in temples you just need to pay for a ticket
Yes, it does. If you want to refer to a certain type, sometimes you can just say "(type) ocha". But be aware that Japanese people also mean 'green tea' when they say just 'ocha'.
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tea is dinner or cup of tea if dinner banmeishi WA dou nattan desu ka och WA dou nattan desuka
茶馆 [chá guǎn]
As far as I know, the Japanese tea ceremony is based from one religion: Buddhism. However, the particular branch would be Zen Buddhism.
bubble tea and green tea are drinks that the Japanese drink
Most of Japanese gardens does have tea houses
What is commonly called by the English as the Japanese Tea Ceremony is called sado or chado (line over o's) or way of the tea or chanyou, literally hot water for tea in Japanese. The tea served at this is green tea. More info on this can be found on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under Japanese Tea Ceremony.
People in Japan usually have a tea ceremony on special events - Japanese festivals or holidays. Japanese Tea ceremonies are also held daily at Japanese tea gardens - there are a few of them in Tokyo (see http://www.tokyo-top-guide.com/Japanese_Gardens.html). Admission fee to these Japanese tea gardens is very reasonable, and the tea ceremony is a shorter version of the traditional Japanese tea ceremony ritual. If you are coming as a tourist to Tokyo - the Okura hotel also holds a tea ceremony in a private room, this naturally costs more than the Japanese tea gardens.