Onii-san is the honorific while the actual word is ani.
兄 (ani) is older brother in Japanese. When addressing someone else's older brother, you should use お兄さん (onii-san).
Otouto is younger brother, ani is older brother.
"Nii-chan" is a term in Japanese that means "older brother." It is a casual and affectionate way to address one's older brother or a male who is like an older brother figure.
Nii-chan or Nii- nii is Japanese for older brother. Onii-chan is someone else's older brother.
Arigato, Onii-san or Arigato, Onii-sama. Depending on the relationship between the brother and sibling, the honorific suffix can change. San is an honorific for those not very close but not very distant either. If the person respects their brother very highly, it would be Onii-sama. Hope that helps.
The "joshi" honorific in Japanese culture is used to show respect towards someone who is older or of higher status. It is commonly used in everyday interactions to address teachers, bosses, or elders. The use of "joshi" signifies politeness and acknowledges the hierarchy within Japanese society.
Very respectful older brother.
Nii-chan means "older brother" in Japanese.
older brother=oniisan younger brother=otooto
사마
"Oni san refers to a brother in the family." It's a little more complicated than this.The Japanese have two sets of family words- one set for your own and another, more polite set for someone else's family. This is because you are expected to be humble about yourself and deferential towards another. So:Onii san is older brother only.The form 'Onii san' is used when speaking about someone else's older brother.The form 'Ani' (with no honorific) is used when speaking about your own older brother.'Onii san' can also be used by a younger person towards an older, unrelated boy. Characters in anime, manga, games, fanfics, etc. often refer to each other this way. You should also use the polite form when speaking to your own older brother, although many use a different, more familiar honorific such a 'chan'. どうわくだ,ね?Younger brother is:otōto (yours)otōto san (someone else's)
It can be translated as 'older brother.'