It means "my most precious treasure."
"Wo de" meaning "mine", "qin ai" meaning beloved, "bao bei" meaning treasure.
Hope that helped.
I love you, beloved.
! (ni hao)lol1. wǒ I / me / myself2. yě also / too3. zhēn de really / truly / genuinely4. xǐ huan to like / to be fond of5. bǎo bèi treasured object / treasure / darling / baby / cowry / good-for-nothing orqueer characterSo,"I really like the Baby"Or something like that.. It matters what you are talking about exactly as you can see..I gave you all of the information above so you can see for yourself.. ;)
And/But where are you?
wo
you in Twi is "wo"
I'm pretty sure you mean "Wo ai ni bao bei" Which means "I love you, baby."
The cast of Wo men hai pa - 2002 includes: Zhinan Li as Bei Mian Mian as Kika Yuting Yang as Fifi Zhou Zijie
The cast of Wo zhe yi bei zi - 1950 includes: Zhi Cheng as Hu Li Chaoming Cui as Sun Yuan Xiu Jiang as Master Qin Wei Li as Hai Fu Ming Liang as Sun Yuanqin Zhen Lin as Madame Qin Yang Shen as Shen Yuan Hui Shi as I Min Wang as My wife Heling Wei as Old Zhao
Wo lai zi Bei Jing - 1992 is rated/received certificates of: Hong Kong:III
I love you, beloved.
I love you a lot baby translated into Chinese is 'wo fei chang ai ni bao bei'. Written in Chinese characters it is 我非常愛你寶貝.
The cast of Wo zhe yi bei zi - 2002 includes: Bing He as Er Zhao Chengru Li as Fangzi Liu Guoli Zhang as Fuhai
Xiaobo Bao has written: 'Wo zhu yi ni hen jiu le!' -- subject(s): Popular music, Sound recording industry
I would like to give you a hug ( cuddle ) Wo xiang wei bao ni . 我 想 偎抱 你 pronounced : Wo shyang way ba ow nee 我想拥抱你 wo(3) xiang(3) yong(1) bao(4) ni(3) --> I would like to hug you
Chinese characters 我被骗了。Chinese phoenix Wo Bei Pian Le.Chinese prounciation W-oh Bei(as the Bei in Beijing) P-yi-ann Le (as in the le in learning)
Chang Shen has: Played Zhang Fenggu in "Wo ai wo jia" in 1993. Played Zhu Zhu in "Meng huan tian yuan" in 1999. Played Bar girl in "Lian ai zhong de Bao Bei" in 2004. Played Miss Bai in "Mei ren yi jiu" in 2005. Played Tian Yuan in "Nv ren bu huai" in 2008. Played Masseuse in "Wo zhi nv ren xin" in 2011.
If you are referring to "a person", it is called "ren". And... "I"/"Me" => "Wo" "You" => "Ni" "He"/"She" => "Ta" "We"/"Us" => "Wo Men" "You" => "Ni Men" "They"/"Them" => "Ta Men"