I believe you mean:
我是
Wǒ shì
"I am"
An example of when this is used is when someone asks for a certain person.
Johnny先生? (Mr. Johnny?)
我是. (I am [Mr. Johnny].)
It means "me" or "I".
我 (wo with a third tone) means I, me, myself.
In Chinese, "si si" can mean "silk and silk" referring to luxury goods, or it can also mean "silk thread" which is used in traditional Chinese embroidery. Its meaning can vary depending on the context or usage.
I miss you in Chinese is 我想你 is Wo xiang ni (pronounced as: war siang ni) i miss you very very much! in Chinese is 我想死你啦! Is wo xiang si ni le (pronounced as: war siang si (not see) ni ler) ǐ
Wo men shi sheng si ji jiao means: we are more than blood brothers.
"I love you" in Mandarin Chinese. Actually It should be Wo Ai Ni
No, "wo jiang hao" is not a Chinese word. In Chinese, "wo jiang hao" (我将好) would mean "I will be fine," but this is not a common phrase used in everyday conversation.
Chinese? WO = ME or I XIANG = WANT TO / WANT AI = LOVE / LIKE Hope This Helped
"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."
"I" in Chinese is pronounced as "wo" written as "我"
wo qi (chi) shi si sui。 我 七 是 四 岁。
the tone for wo in Chinese is a little arrow pointing down