Both expressions go fine (in what I have read at least)
You would say "She is older than her." "Her" is the correct pronoun to use in this comparison.
Older than
You can either say: He is older than I am or you can can say she is older than me.
No, it is not grammatically correct. The correct way to say it is "your older sister."
Yes. My sister is 2 years older than me. Your sister is two years older than you. Comparative adjectives - older - are used with than. Bigger than, smaller than. tighter than. Or if the adjective has more than 2 syllables say: more exciting than, more interesting than, more expensive than
Here is the meaning of the words "noona" and the other similar words:unni = What girls say to older sisters or girls older than themselves.oppa = What girls say to older brothers or boys older than themselves.noona = What boys say to older sisters or girls older than themselveshyung = What boys say to older brothers or boys older than themselvesdongsaeng = younger siblings
Here is the meaning of the words "noona" and the other similar words:unni = What girls say to older sisters or girls older than themselves.oppa = What girls say to older brothers or boys older than themselves.noona = What boys say to older sisters or girls older than themselveshyung = What boys say to older brothers or boys older than themselvesdongsaeng = younger siblings
me
yes because hes older and taller
No. Prefer the usage in these examples: She is older than me. She is older than I am. She is my elder/older sister. (Both are generally acceptable in modern usage.) My elder/older brother is a teacher. My car is older than your car. Your cat is older than my dog. Of the two sisters, Siân is the elder/older.
It is correct to say "...serves more than 6000..."
Elder should be corrected to older.