姉妹 (shimai) means sister.
妹さん (imōto-san) means little sister.
お姉さん (onē-san) means big sister.
愛してる (anata-o-ai-shite-ru-imoto-san) means I love you little sister
La gran hermana
The sentence 'I love my sister' would be 姉が大好きです (ane ga daisuki desu) in Japanese when talking about one's older sister. To say 'I love my sister' when referring to a younger sister, you would say 妹が大好きです (imouto ga daisuki desu).
You may say something along the lines of "Niichan, konnichiwa."
大きな目 (Ōkina me)
The way to say "older sister" isoneechan (pronounced "oh - NAY - chan") = Familiar formoneesan = Honorific formane = Humble formYou can also take the "o" off the first two to make it just neechan or neesan, but that's more general "sister" rather than for an older sister.For younger sister,imouto = Basic formimoutosan = Honorific form1. my older sister is ane2. my younger sister is Imooto3.your younger sister is Imootosan
"neko no onesan" which basically means "cat's big sister"
私のお姉ちゃん (watashi no oneechan)
To say "big sister" in French, you would say "grande sœur."
You may say 'imouto.'
zan zumi
Big sister In Laos
姉 Ane
The term 'little sister' could be translated as 'imouto', to say 'my little sister' you could say 'watashi no imouto'. But remember, if you are going to refer to someone else's little sister, you must say 'imouto-san', 'san' being the honorific, which are a key element of the Japanese language and etiquette.
In Cantonese, "big sister" is 姐姐 (je6 je6).
In Thai, you would say "น้องสาว (nóng săao)" to refer to a big sister.
姐姐 [jiě jie]
Kakak