Ni Hao is Chinese for hello...is that what you wanted to know?
It means "I miss you very much"
I thin you mean ni bu hui can wo, it means "you can't see me" in mandarin
The Chinese phrase 'Ni tai hao le' or 你太好了 translates to English as 'You are too good.'
(SWA-NI-OCKS)
Ni Hao is Chinese for hello...is that what you wanted to know?
"Ni gatsu" is a Japanese word and in English it means "February"
"juu ni" is a Japanese word and in English it means "twelve"
"Not returned" in French.
What are your hobbies
"Are you a pig?"
I THINK YOU MEAN "我爱你", WHICH MEANS "I LOVE YOU" IT'S ACTUALLY SPELLED "WO AI NI", PRONOUNCED MUCH THE SAME, "WHOA-AY-NI"
Iuni - (ee-yew-ni)
Literally, it would become: "kuuki no ue ni aruiteimasu." That'll be pronounced: koo-kee no oo-eh nee ah-roo-ee-teh-ee-moss.
If you mean the 'at sign'(@) アットマーク /a-tto maa ku/ is the term in Japanese. If you mean AT as an abbreviation it is written エーティー /ee tii/. If you mean 'at' as a preposition, depending on context of usage it can have different equivalents such as で /de/ and に /ni/ (にて /ni te/ is also used but is literary and formal), e.g. 'Uchie de yarimasu' means 'I will do it at home' or 'byouin ni sannin ga atta' means 'There were three people at the hospital'.[ee = elongated 'e' sound]
This translates from Chinese to mean flowers.
"Ni jiao shenme mingzi" translates to "What is your name?" in English.