百合/Bǎihé
The name Lily translates into simplified Chinese as Baihe. This name in Italian is Gigilo and in the Spanish language it is spelled as Lirio.
She is definetly not chinese
'Lily' in Chinese is written as 莉莉. In pinyin or pronunciation of the characters is 'li li'.
Lily Loh has written: 'Lily Loh's Chinese seafood & vegetables' -- subject(s): Chinese Cookery, Cookery (Seafood), Cookery (Vegetables)
well in that question,.,.,..,.,chinese believe that if you give a water lily in the one you love,.,.,.,.you can be with her forever,.,.,..,,.,.,.,.,.,.
How do you say lily in hawaain
yes actually there are 1 is called The Princess Lily it is a Chinese Folktale go to cracklemountain.blogspot.com/2006/07/princess-lily-chinese-folktale.html
It is a plant that's part of the lily family. Chinese legends say that these plant will lengthen your life, but this has not be proved yet. Science is 95% positive that it won't. Some Chinese think that it will (5% of them!)
A lily is 'un lys' (masc.) in French.
She ran a Chinese mercantille company.
Yes, "Lily" can be used as a name in China, particularly as a transliteration of the English name. It is also associated with the flower, which holds cultural significance in Chinese tradition. However, it is not a traditional Chinese name; native Chinese names typically have different structures and meanings.
It's still same... "Lily"...