"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."
我是 Wǒ shì
wo shi ta-di zhang-fu
Wo shi ni de nu har- I'm your girl Wo shi ni de nan har- I'm your boy
Wo hen gao xing, ren shi ni
My Chinese teacher is... in Chinese characters is 我的中文老師是. In pinyin it's written as 'wo de zhong wen lao shi shi'. Broken down the translation is: My / 我的 / wo de Chinese / 中文 / zhong wen Teacher / 老師 / lao shi Is / 是 / shi
Ni hao. Wo de ming zi shi ____
Zhe shi wo ba ba. 這是我爸爸。
"Wo ye shi wai guo ren" means "I am also a foreigner" in Chinese. The addition of "too" at the end doesn't have a specific meaning in Chinese and may have been added for emphasis or clarification in English.
In Mandarin Chinese, I am thirteen years old is 我十三岁. It is pronunced is wo shi san sui.
In Mandarin Chinese:我是我 (wǒ shì wǒ): "I am me"你好(nǐ hǎo): This is like "hello"
Wo ye shi zhe you Xiang de