How would one use an “elder brother” with a “brother”?

I just watched a film called Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules.

I wonder how one knows whether he is an elder brother or a younger brother when he only mentions that he has a brother and does not specify? Does brother mean elder? Why or why not?

I saw in the film: The girl knows that when a boy tells him he has a brother, he is older than him.

I suspect that is because the boy is so old.

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What might be the most important difference between brother and teenager, although on film the word brother doesn’t exist. So when can I simply remove the word brother or not? If the girl did immediately know the brother was older, she must have been able to infer it from context or have some a priori knowledge.

Usually when you need to specify the relative age of a sibling, you’ll use something like:

My older brother

You’ll also often see a “size” adjective substituted for a strict age comparative, mostly among children(where there’s a stronger correlation between size and age than in adults): My

big sister or

my younger brother

Answered on March 27, 2021.
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