It means "Thank you".
(Gee, I actually knew that one! lol)
In Chinese, "sh e sh e" (she she) does not have a specific meaning. It seems to be a typo or a mispronunciation of a word or phrase. If you provide more context or the correct spelling, I can try to assist you further.
In Mandarin Chinese, the letter "x" is pronounced like the English "sh" sound. It is transliterated as "x" in pinyin.
In Chinese, "water" is 水 (shuǐ).
The word "she" consists of two phonemes: /ʃ/ (sh sound) and /iː/ (long e sound).
You would say "Je ne suis pas chinois" in French to mean "I am not Chinese."
The word "xian" in Chinese is written as "仙" and is pronounced like "sh-yan" with a tone that rises and falls.
ti-que-la: too expensive Ni How: hello sh-e sh-e: thank you ayo: sure
It doesn't appear to have a specific meaning in any known language. It may be a made-up or nonsensical phrase.
In Mandarin Chinese, the letter "x" is pronounced like the English "sh" sound. It is transliterated as "x" in pinyin.
Sh E. Mikeladze has written: 'Izbrannye trudy' -- subject(s): Mathematics
水 (Sh-oo-way)
In Chinese, "water" is 水 (shuǐ).
E. Sh Bentsianova has written: 'Sbornik diktantov po russkomu yazyku, 7 klass'
"sh aka" has no meaning in Hebrew.
k-e-sh-a not kEEsha
Kakashka Mean Sh*t
Sh**
Eat Sh*t... ai (eat) kae (sh*t)