"Dai suki desuyo, Onii-san."
You may also replace Onii-san with O/Nii-Chan, O/Nii-Sama, or Aniki depending on how you're talking. O/Nii-chan is used when you're casually talking or when you're trying to be cute. O/Nii-Sama is used when you're trying to be very respectful, Aniki and O/Nii-san are just used in generic situations.
Suki - Love
Desuyo - You
O/Nii-san - Older/Big Brother
Aniki inai to samishi ni narimasu. (Literal: I am lonely without my big brother)
Japanese- あなたの弟を愛して
English- love you little brother
Older brothers are called 兄 (ani), while younger brothers are called 弟 (otouto).
弟 Otōto
弟 Otōto
"otouto"if it's your younger brother, "otoutosan" if it's somebody else's younger brother.
White when translated from English to Japanese is shiro for shiro means white
These phrases have no direct translations, and I'm having difficulty thinking of any Japanese phrase that conveys the same meaning.
Chocolate is 'chokoreeto' in Japanese.
Dog in Japanese is 'inu'.
Domo.
Sakarerumono
Koibito.
Yonbanme
何 (nani)