Mei-mei used in the context with a secondary high tone (mae-mae), implies the following:
βhey there, hot stuffβ
βhey, babyβ
βsup, sugarβ
βhey there, sweet stuffβ
Itβs usually used in context of bars and night clubs in Asia where the girls are indeed working you for their pay.
Mei-mei used to describe a little sister is used with a sharp descending fourth tone. So even though the two words are written the same, your pronunciation could cause you to get slapped or a confused return expression.
Mandarin Chinese consists of four tones: first flat, secondary high, third deep, and fourth sharp. Two of the same words with a third tone makes the second word pronounced with a second intonation.
Little sister context (fourth tone):
Translation: "this is my mei mei"
Night club context (third and second tone):
Translaton: "hey mae mae, come cover here"
girl or guy that is commonly shorter than the average asian. Tends to work at beverage counters that serve cheap artifical drinks. ie: quicky's, tapioca express, etc... a player that drives around in cars, illegally.