This article examines how Linguistic Landscapes in the Covid-19 pandemic construct the borders of place and people. We
build on ‘semiotic ideology’ (Keane, 2018) and ‘semiotopology’ (Peck, Stroud & Williams, 2018) to analyze the bordering practices in citizen Linguistic Landscapes
during the pandemic in Nepal. Our analysis shows that citizens combine multiple semiotic resources, both linguistic and
non-linguistic, to create physical boundaries to restrict the mobility of people during the pandemic. However, the findings show
that such practices are ideological; they promote the othering of the tenants, returnees from abroad/outside the valley, and
non-locals. We argue that keeping place and people at the centre of analysis provides a critical framework to widen the scope of
Linguistic Landscapes as a broad visual and semiotic space that embodies the bordering practices and categorization of people and
their impacts on emotions, identities, and sense of belonging.