It depends on the tone, but it is usually a drawn out "way".
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.
Try "Wei", pronounced like "way". Usually used to say hello, but can be construed as rude depending on the audience. I find Hong Kong people sometimes react negatively to it. When you want someones attention "Wei" away at them, and it means "Hey". You can use "Ni Hao" more politely, but it literally means "you good?" and is used as a greeting. Chinese;Simplified: 嘿 Chinese; Traditional: 嘿 Chinese; Simplified: Hi-(ee) Chinese; Traditional: Hi- (ee) Pronounce "hi" slightly dragged out, -(ee) quick and relativley inaudible.
"Baby" in Chinese is pronounced as "bǎobèi" (宝贝).
You pronounce it as (bu4) with the intonation going down. And do not prolong the word
We means 我们 in Chinese. And the pronounce of 我们 is "wo men"
Wei means hello on the phone in mandarin chinese.
the Chinese umbrella was made in the wei dynasty
Jing Wei has written: 'Liu Mei ri ji' -- subject(s): Chinese diaries, Diaries, Chinese students
Wei Zhao has written: 'Zhuyan an jin shi mu lu' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Chinese Inscriptions, Inscriptions, Chinese
Yifeng Liu has written: 'La wei, La wei' -- subject(s): Chinese Cookery, Cookery (Spices), Cookery, Chinese
Ziyu. Pan has written: 'Zi wei dou shu kan bing' -- subject(s): Chinese Astrology, Chinese Medicine 'Zi wei dou shu xin de' -- subject(s): Chinese Astrology, Zi wei dou shu
it's German and is pronounced: heh-fe-wei-zen
Wei Xiong Kuang has written: 'Hou nian yun cheng' -- subject(s): Astrology, Chinese, Chinese Astrology, Horoscopes
Junxiu Wei has written: 'Fu Shan lun shu fa' -- subject(s): Calligraphy, Chinese, Chinese Calligraphy, Criticism and interpretation
Wenji Li has written: 'Zhen wei zhi jiang' -- subject(s): Chinese Cookery, Condiments, Cookery, Chinese, Sauces 'Zhen wei xiao chao' -- subject(s): Chinese Cookery, Cookery, Chinese
Boner street
To spell Kaydee in Chinese is Kai di depending on how you pronounce it. In Chinese they pronounce Kaydee, Katie with using the "t:.