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Is there any difference?
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What is the significance, if any, between ELDER and OLDER, as in elder brother or older brother.
It has been suggested that elder in this concext implies only one brother, while older could mean one of many. If this is so, how could such difference be indicated in the case of one or more "younger" siblings?
It has been suggested that elder in this concext implies only one brother, while older could mean one of many. If this is so, how could such difference be indicated in the case of one or more "younger" siblings?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.�Elder' as an adjective is generally used only in the context of family seniority..."He is my elder brother", as you suggest. It is used where only two siblings are being compared. If three or more are involved, 'older/oldest' is used.
(In political situations, the phrase 'an elder statesman' is sometimes used simply to indicate long service.) Re 'younger', the difference could perhaps be indicated only by using 'a'...'He is a younger brother of mine', which would suggest that there are again more than one involved.
(In political situations, the phrase 'an elder statesman' is sometimes used simply to indicate long service.) Re 'younger', the difference could perhaps be indicated only by using 'a'...'He is a younger brother of mine', which would suggest that there are again more than one involved.
A bit of all three, Aqua, but more often 'b' and 'c' than 'a'!
There is also a 'd'...I've been on AnswerBank for well over five years and, prior to that, for several years on a similar USA-based Q & A site. Overall, I've answered about 10,000 questions and I soon grasped that many were hardy perennials and so started to create my very own 'encyclop�dia'.
Over the years I have refined it and it now contains almost 1200 ready-made 'answers' from 'abracadabra' through 'Magna Carta' to 'yoghurt'. When the appropriate query appears, I leap into my very own little Britannica, cut, paste, modify and... voil�!
Cheers
There is also a 'd'...I've been on AnswerBank for well over five years and, prior to that, for several years on a similar USA-based Q & A site. Overall, I've answered about 10,000 questions and I soon grasped that many were hardy perennials and so started to create my very own 'encyclop�dia'.
Over the years I have refined it and it now contains almost 1200 ready-made 'answers' from 'abracadabra' through 'Magna Carta' to 'yoghurt'. When the appropriate query appears, I leap into my very own little Britannica, cut, paste, modify and... voil�!
Cheers
The adjective elder is not a synonym for elderly. In comparisons between two persons, elder means "older" but not necessarily "old": My elder sister is sixteen; my younger, twelve. (Eldest is used when three or more persons are compared: He is the eldest of four brothers.) In other contexts elder does denote relatively advanced age but with the added component of respect for a person's achievement, as in an elder statesman. If age alone is to be expressed, one should use older or elderly rather than elder: A survey of older Americans; an elderly waiter. � Unlike elder and its related forms, the adjectives old, older, and oldest are applied to things as well as to persons.
An elder statesman is an older person who is respected and asked for advice because of their past experience.
Your elders and betters old-fashioned - people who are older than you and who should be treated with respect.
Elders are generally any learned or authoritative figures in religious traditions.
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/~nurelweb/books/con cise/WORDS-E.html
An elder statesman is an older person who is respected and asked for advice because of their past experience.
Your elders and betters old-fashioned - people who are older than you and who should be treated with respect.
Elders are generally any learned or authoritative figures in religious traditions.
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/~nurelweb/books/con cise/WORDS-E.html