That appears to be "너무 미워," which roughly means "I hate you so much."
Mahal Kita- Filipino "i love you" Sarang hae- Korean "I love you" towards a bf or gf. Wo ai ni- Chinese "i love you"
Chae-wo n. Kim has written: 'Treasures of Korean art' -- subject(s): Art objects, Korean, Art, Buddhist, Buddhist Art, Korean Art objects, Pottery
The same way you did.
KKbar Hydarabadi has written: 'Numoo ki aag'
wo jiao
And/But where are you?
wo yi ban
The German word Woche (always capitalized) means week in English.
我 (wo with a third tone) means I, me, myself.
Wo sind sie = Where are they? Wo sind Sie = Where are you?
The 'wo' is not necessary. It would mean 'would you please marry me?'.
ni(zou) yao(want) wo(me9)