If you are referring to a young lady, you would say 'xiao jie' which literally translates into 'little older sister.' If you mean 'miss' as in the context of 'I miss you,' you say 'xiang ni' which is 'thinking of you.'
To say "I miss you" in Chinese, you can say "我想念你" (wǒ xiǎngniàn nǐ).
tzitchien
I miss you is "wo xiang ni" [wah she-ang nee]
wa xing ni
Yes, you can say "我想你" to friends in Chinese. It means "I miss you" and is a common expression to show care and affection towards friends.
The Chinese say "I miss you" as "我想念你." In Hanyu Pinyin, this is pronounced Wo3 xiang3nian4 ni3. In Gwoyeu Romatzyh it's pronounced "Woo sheangniann nii." Here's a breakdown: 我 - I, me 想念 - to miss 你 - you
Chinese? 我错过这么多ü is i miss u so much in simp. Chinese
I miss you: 我想念你/Wǒ xiǎngniàn nǐ
我想念夏天 Wǒ xiǎngniàn xiàtiān
I miss you in Chinese is 我想你 is Wo xiang ni (pronounced as: war siang ni) i miss you very very much! in Chinese is 我想死你啦! Is wo xiang si ni le (pronounced as: war siang si (not see) ni ler) ǐ
'Miss' in Chinese is written as '小姐' and is pronounced as 'xiao jie'.
Literally it is "我会很想你的," but few Chinese would actually say so like native English speakers in real life.