"Sorella maggiore"
Maggiore in Italian means "older" in English.
older sister- Aneyounger sister- Imouto
Onee- Older sister (most common, though there is one more)
onee-sama
"Ms" in English means signorina for a woman in her 30s or younger and signora for a woman in her 40s or older in Italian.
Amata is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Amy." The feminine proper noun in question traces its origins to the older Amee and the more recent Aimée for "beloved" in French. The pronunciation will be "a-MA-ta" in Italian.
Oneesan is older sister. Imoutosan is younger sister. Older sister is onee-chan and younger sister is imouto. Also, older brother is onii-chan and younger brother is otouto. Older sister - (when you're talking to her or talking about someone else's sister) is Onee-san. If you're talking about them to someone else, then it's ane. Younger sister - Imouto
"Always older" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase sempre più vecchio. The adverb, comparative/superlative, and masculine singular adjective also translate into English as "always more ancient." The pronunciation will be "SEM-prey pyoo VEK-kyo" in Italian.
1/4 Italian, 1/4 English, 1/2 Guyanese ...don't you just love her?
Your sister's husband is your brother-in-law. The English language makes no distinction between the husband of an older sister and the husband of a younger sister.
It is 'ane,' written: 姉
furui