I am using numbers to represent the intonations. 1 would be 1st tone and so on. If you do not know the Chinese tones you would not be able to pronounce the words correctly.
Literally Hi, my name is crystal would be:
Hai4, wo3 de4 ming2 zi4 shi4 Crystal.
But a more common semi-formal greeting would be ni2 hao3 (literally: you good, something like "how are you?" in English) instead of hai4. Hai4 would be fine with the younger Chinese in an informal situation. But then you might as well say:
Hai4 wo3 shi4 Crystal.
Literally, Hi, I am Crystal.
你好,我的名字是Crystal。 (Nǐ hǎo, wǒ de míngzì shì Crystal.)
To say "hi" in Chinese, you can say "你好" (pronounced "nǐ hǎo").
You can say "你好" (néih hóu) to say 'hi' or 'hello' in Chinese Cantonese.
In standard Chinese, the word for "hi" is 你好 (pronounced "ni hao").
You can say "你好,我的名字是" (nǐ hǎo, wǒ de míngzì shì) in Mandarin Chinese.
In Chinese, you can say "hi" as 你好 (nǐ hǎo) or "hello" as 你好 (nǐ hǎo) as well.
To say "hi" in Chinese, you can say "你好" (pronounced "nǐ hǎo").
"Hi my name is" 我的名字 Wǒ de míngzì For the English name, Morgan, just say it as you normally would. They will understand.
Hi in Chinese is ni hao of 你 好 which is pronounced nee how.
You pronounce it "hi-zi" or "shou-hi"
You can say "你好" (néih hóu) to say 'hi' or 'hello' in Chinese Cantonese.
你好
嗨 ni how
Nihao
喂,嗨 (hey hey) this is Chinese for hi
嗨 the pronounciation is "hai"
ni hao
In standard Chinese, the word for "hi" is 你好 (pronounced "ni hao").