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"
"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."
xiang ni wei wo shem co khu shemme ne nhi mo
"Wo xi huan ni" is pronounced as "woh shee hwan nee," with emphasis on the last syllable "nee."
It means 'I comforted you'. (我安慰了.) The proper way to write it with pinyin is 'wo an wei ni le'. The 'le' would indicate past tense.
I love you. You are pretty. I love you the most in this world.
"I love you" in Mandarin Chinese. Actually It should be Wo Ai Ni
I love you.
"I love you" is an English equivalent of the mixed Chinese and Italian phrase Wo ie ni! Ti amo! The Chinese represents the Mandarin form. The Italian represents the peninsular, standard form.
ni(zou) yao(want) wo(me9)
Wo ai ni
"Wo ai ni" means "I love you" in Chinese (Mandarin)
"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."
In Chinese, "I love you" is: Wo (I) Ai (love) Ni (you) Wo ai ni.
literally it means 'you are my everything'.
wo ai ni pronounciation: (wo aye nee) also. 我爱你
I will wait for you because I love you.
Wo DUI ni, you gan jue (I have feelings for you) Wo ai ni (I Love You)