ni hao= hello
zai jien= goodbye
in Chinese.
"Ni hao" means hello or hi in Chinese, while "zai jian" means goodbye. So together, "ni hao zai jian" is a way to say both hello and goodbye.
Hi and How Are You are the same things:Ni Hao Or Ni Hao Ma?Hao means good if you say it by itself."Ni Hao!" (Hello, How are you?) "Hao, Hao." (Good, good.)Sorry but that is not correct.Ni hao: HelloNi hao ma?: How are you?They are very different, they mean totally different things.Here is a Conversation:A: Ni hao! (Hello)ä½ å¥½ï¼B: Ni hao! (" ")ä½ å¥½ï¼A: Ni hao ma? (How are you)ä½ å¥½å—ï¼ŸB: Bu cuo, xie xie, ni ne? (Really well, thanks, and you?)ä¸é”™ï¼Œè°¢è°¢ï¼Œä½ å‘¢ï¼ŸA: Hai ke yi. (Very good)还可以。B: Zai jian (Goodbye)再见。A: Zai jian! (Goodbye)再见。[ Waring these words are all not said as they apier. aka. xie xie = Sh-e-a Sh-e-a]There were some basic spelling errors in the previous response. The have all been fixed in bold!
"Ni Hao" means "hello" in Chinese. To respond, you can say "Ni Hao" back.
The Mandarin phrase "ni zai ganma ne" translates to "What are you doing?" in English.
"Ni hao Wu Jiao" is incomplete Chinese. "Ni hao" means "hello" in Mandarin, but "Wu Jiao" does not have a specific meaning in Chinese. It is possible that "Wu Jiao" is a name or a place.
"Ni hao wo shi" is not a standard phrase in Chinese. "Ni hao" means "hello" and "wo shi" means "I am." The correct way to say "hello, I am" in Chinese is "Ni hao, wo shi."
To say Hello is Ni hao And to say goodbye is Zai jian
Hi and How Are You are the same things:Ni Hao Or Ni Hao Ma?Hao means good if you say it by itself."Ni Hao!" (Hello, How are you?) "Hao, Hao." (Good, good.)Sorry but that is not correct.Ni hao: HelloNi hao ma?: How are you?They are very different, they mean totally different things.Here is a Conversation:A: Ni hao! (Hello)ä½ å¥½ï¼B: Ni hao! (" ")ä½ å¥½ï¼A: Ni hao ma? (How are you)ä½ å¥½å—ï¼ŸB: Bu cuo, xie xie, ni ne? (Really well, thanks, and you?)ä¸é”™ï¼Œè°¢è°¢ï¼Œä½ å‘¢ï¼ŸA: Hai ke yi. (Very good)还可以。B: Zai jian (Goodbye)再见。A: Zai jian! (Goodbye)再见。[ Waring these words are all not said as they apier. aka. xie xie = Sh-e-a Sh-e-a]There were some basic spelling errors in the previous response. The have all been fixed in bold!
"Ni Hao" means "hello" in Chinese. To respond, you can say "Ni Hao" back.
'ni hao ma' means 'how are you' and 'bu hao' means 'not good'
Ni Hao is Chinese for hello...is that what you wanted to know?
The Mandarin phrase "ni zai ganma ne" translates to "What are you doing?" in English.
掰掰 (bye bye) or 再見 (zai jian)
'Ni hao' or 你好 is Chinese for 'hi' or 'hello'.Ni hao is a Chinese greeting like hello. It literally means 'you good'. If you add ma at the end that turns Ni hao into a question: Ni hao ma?
The phrase 'nee how' (usually written ni hao or ni hao ma) is the Chinese way of asking 'How are you?'.
Ni hao Ni hao bu hao
"Ni hao Wu Jiao" is incomplete Chinese. "Ni hao" means "hello" in Mandarin, but "Wu Jiao" does not have a specific meaning in Chinese. It is possible that "Wu Jiao" is a name or a place.
Hao! wo hen hao, ni zhenme yang ?