English Braille
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English Braille, also known as ''Grade 2 Braille'', is the
braille alphabet Braille (Pronounced: ) is a tactile writing system used by people who are visually impaired, including people who are blind, deafblind or who have low vision. It can be read either on embossed paper or by using refreshable braille display ...
used for
English English usually refers to: * English language * English people English may also refer to: Peoples, culture, and language * ''English'', an adjective for something of, from, or related to England ** English national ...
. It consists of around 250 letters ( phonograms), numerals, punctuation, formatting marks, contractions, and abbreviations (
logogram In a written language, a logogram, logograph, or lexigraph is a written character that represents a word or morpheme. Chinese characters (pronounced '' hanzi'' in Mandarin, ''kanji'' in Japanese, ''hanja'' in Korean) are generally logograms, ...
s). Some English Braille letters, such as , correspond to more than one letter in print. There are three levels of complexity in English Braille. Grade 1 is a nearly one-to-one transcription of printed English and is restricted to basic literacy. Grade 2, which is nearly universal beyond basic literacy materials, abandons one-to-one transcription in many places (such as the letter ) and adds hundreds of abbreviations and contractions. Both Grade 1 and Grade 2 have been standardized. "Grade 3" is any of various personal
shorthand Shorthand is an abbreviated symbolic writing method that increases speed and brevity of writing as compared to longhand, a more common method of writing a language. The process of writing in shorthand is called stenography, from the Greek ''s ...
s that are almost never found in publications. Most of this article describes the 1994 American edition of Grade 2 Braille, which is largely equivalent to British Grade 2 Braille. Some of the differences with Unified English Braille, which was officially adopted by various countries between 2005 and 2012, are discussed at the end. Braille is frequently portrayed as a re-encoding of the
English orthography English orthography is the writing system used to represent spoken English, allowing readers to connect the graphemes to sound and to meaning. It includes English's norms of spelling, hyphenation, capitalisation, word breaks, emphasis, ...
used by sighted people. However, braille is a separate writing system, not a variant of the printed
English alphabet The alphabet for Modern English is a Latin-script alphabet consisting of 26 letters, each having an upper- and lower-case form. The word ''alphabet'' is a compound of the first two letters of the Greek alphabet, ''alpha'' and '' beta''. ...
.


History

Braille was introduced to Britain in 1861. In 1876, a French-based system with a few hundred English contractions and abbreviations was adopted as the predominant script in Great Britain. However, the contractions and abbreviations proved unsatisfactory, and in 1902 the current grade-2 system, called Revised Braille, was adopted in the British Commonwealth.War of the Dots
In 1878, the ideal of basing all braille alphabets of the world on the original French alphabetic order was accepted by Britain, Germany, and Egypt (see
International Braille The goal of braille uniformity is to unify the braille alphabets of the world as much as possible, so that literacy in one braille alphabet readily transfers to another. Unification was first achieved by a convention of the ''International Congre ...
). In the United States at the time, three scripts were used: non-braille
New York Point New York Point (New York Point: ) is a braille-like system of tactile writing for the blind invented by William Bell Wait (1839–1916), a teacher in the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind. The system used one to four pairs of poi ...
; American Braille, which was reordered so that the most frequent letters were the ones with the fewest dots; and a variation of English Braille, which was reordered to match the English alphabet, assigning the values ''wxyz'' to the letters that, in France and England, stood for ''xyzç''. A partially contracted English Braille, Grade , was adopted in Britain in 1918, and fully contracted Grade 2, with a few minor concessions to the Americans, was adopted in 1932. The concessions were to swap the British two-dot capital sign with the one-dot emphasis sign, which had generally been omitted anyway (as capitals had been in
New York Point New York Point (New York Point: ) is a braille-like system of tactile writing for the blind invented by William Bell Wait (1839–1916), a teacher in the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind. The system used one to four pairs of poi ...
), to drop a few religious contractions from general usage, and to introduce a rule stating that contractions and abbreviations should not span 'major' syllable boundaries. In 1991, an American proposal was made for Unified English Braille, intended to eliminate the confusion caused by competing standards for academic uses of English Braille. After several design revisions, it has since been adopted by the Commonwealth countries starting in 2005, and by the United States (starting a gradual introduction after 2012). The chief differences with Revised Braille are in punctuation, symbols, and formatting, more accurately reflecting print conventions in matters such as brackets, mathematical notation, and typefaces.


System

The 64 braille patterns are arranged into decades based on the numerical order of those patterns. The first decade are the numerals 1 through 0, which utilize only the top and mid row of the cell; the 2nd through 4th decades are derived from the first by adding dots to the bottom row; the 5th decade is created by shifting the first decade downwards. In addition, for each decade there are two additional mirror-image patterns, and finally there are three patterns that utilize only the bottom row of the cell. The final pattern, the empty cell , is used as a
space Space is the boundless three-dimensional extent in which objects and events have relative position and direction. In classical physics, physical space is often conceived in three linear dimensions, although modern physicists usually consi ...
; it has the same width as the others. Cells 1 through 25 plus 40 (''w'') are assigned to the 26 letters of the basic Latin alphabet. The other 37 cells are often used for punctuation and typically assigned different values in different languages. The English grade-two values are as follows; cells with dots on only the right side do not have equivalents in printed English and are explained in the notes. :* ''
Formatting marks Format may refer to: Printing and visual media * Text formatting, the typesetting of text elements * Paper formats, or paper size standards * Newspaper format, the size of the paper page Computing * File format, particular way that informa ...
, explained below'' :§ '' Abbreviation signs, illustrated below'' : ''Abolished in Unified English Braille'' :¤ The period, , is distinguished from the decimal point, . The apostrophe, , is distinguished from the single quotation mark.


Alphabet

The English Braille alphabet has letters that correspond directly to the 26 letters of the English print alphabet plus ligatures that are equivalent to digraphs and sequences in print. : ''Abolished in Unified English Braille'' Some of these ligatures transcribe common words, such as ''and'' or ''of'', but they are not words: Pronunciation and meaning are ignored, and only spelling is relevant. For example, is commonly used when the sequence of print letters ''the'' appears, not just for the word "the". That is, is the ''letter'' "the" in braille, as in the two-letter word ''then (the-n)''. Similarly, ''hand'' is written ''h-and'', ''roof'' (which sounds nothing like the word "of") is written ''r-o-of'', and ''forest'' is written with three letters in braille, ''for-e-st''. Numbers are used this way as well—''7th'' is written ''#-7-th'', and here printed English approximates normal practice in braille. There are numerous conventions for when a print sequence is "contracted" this way in braille, and when it is spelled out in full. The ligatures and may not begin a word (as in *''bled'': would be read instead as ), but are used everywhere else (as in ''problem, trouble''). The ligatures of the third decade, , take precedence over the letters of later decades. For example, ''then'' is written ''the-n'', not * ''th-en''. When standing as words adjacent to other such words, or to ''a'', no space is left between them. For example, ''and the, for a, with the, of a'' are all fused together. When printed ''ch, gh, sh, th'' are pronounced as two sounds, as in ''Shanghai, hogshead,'' and ''outhouse'', then they are written as two braille letters rather than with the ligatures . Generally, other ligatures should not be used if they might cause problems with legibility, as with the ''ing'' in ''lingerie'', though they tend to be with familiar words, such as ''ginger'' and ''finger'', even if their pronunciation is divided between syllables. None of the ligatures are to be used across the boundaries of compound words. For example, is not used in ''twofold'', nor in ''dumbbell''. The rules state that they should not span a prefix and stem either, so for example the ''ed'' in ''deduce'', the ''er'' of ''rerun'' and ''derail'', and the ''ble'' of ''sublet'' should be written out in full. In practice this is variable, as it depends upon the awareness of the writer. The ''of'' in ''professor'', for example, might not be recognized spanning prefix and stem, and often ''a-cc-ept'' or ''a-dd-r-e-s-s'' are accepted, despite the technical violation. There is also conflict with the overriding tendency to contract sequences that fall within a single syllable. So the same writer who divides the ''er'' in ''derive'' may allow the ligature in ''derivation''. A similar pattern emerges from suffixes: is not used in ''freedom'', since it spans stem and suffix, but is used in ''freed'', because it forms a single syllable with the stem. What is considered to constitute a prefix or suffix is somewhat arbitrary: is not used in ''Charlestown,'' for example, but it is in ''Charleston''. Ligatures may also not separate digraphs or diphthongs in print. For example, ''aerial'' does not use , ''Oedipus'' does not use , and ''tableau'' does not use . Also, it is normal to use the letter for the
broken vowel In historical linguistics, vowel breaking, vowel fracture, or diphthongization is the sound change of a monophthong into a diphthong or triphthong. Types Vowel breaking may be unconditioned or conditioned. It may be triggered by the presence ...
in ''i-d-ea-s'' or ''c-r-ea-t-e'', despite it being pronounced as two sounds rather than one as in ''head'' or ''ocean''. Ligatures should not be used for
acronym An acronym is a word or name formed from the initial components of a longer name or phrase. Acronyms are usually formed from the initial letters of words, as in ''NATO'' (''North Atlantic Treaty Organization''), but sometimes use syllables, as ...
s that are pronounced as a string of letters. That is, ''DEA'' should not use the letter , nor PST the letter . Such letters are acceptable in acronyms that are pronounced as a word, however, if the result is not obscure. The letters of the fifth decade are often used in the past tense and other grammatical forms: when ''rub'' becomes ''rubbed'', in braille the letter is moved down a dot to indicate the ''bb''. However, those letters which double as punctuation marks——may only occur sandwiched in the middle of a word, not at the beginning or end, in order to avoid confusion with the punctuation. That is, *''sea, ebb, add, cuff, egg'' must be spelled out in full, though the ligatures are used in ''season, added (a-dd-ed), cuffs,'' and ''eggs''. Because of legibility problems (see "lower contractions" in the next section), they may not come in contact with an apostrophe or hyphen either. That is, in ''egg's'' and ''egg-plant'', ''tea's'' and ''tea-time'', the ''gg'' and ''ea'' must be spelled out in full. If the print letters span an obvious affix, the braille ligature is not used (''preamble, reanalyze, pineapple, subbasement''), but they are used in words such as ''accept'' and ''address'' where the morphology has become opaque. In order to keep the spelling regular, compounds of words starting with ''ea'' keep the ''ea'' spelled out: ''uneasy, anteater, southeast'' do not use the ligature because ''easy, eater, east'' do not use it. These are the least-preferred ligatures: any other will be used instead. Thus ''wedding'' is ''w-ed-d-ing'' (not *''we-dd-ing'') and ''office'' is ''of-f-i-c-e'' (not *''o-ff-i-c-e''). Many of the rules for when to use ligatures, contractions, and abbreviations differ when a word is divided at the end of a line of text, because some of them may not come in contact with the hyphen that divides the word. See the references for details. The accent mark shows that there is a
diacritic A diacritic (also diacritical mark, diacritical point, diacritical sign, or accent) is a glyph added to a letter or to a basic glyph. The term derives from the Ancient Greek (, "distinguishing"), from (, "to distinguish"). The word ''diacrit ...
on the following letter, as in ''señor'', ''façade'', ''café'', ''naïve'', and ''ångström''. In normal braille text, noting the precise diacritic is not important, as it can be easily understood from context, or simply ignored. Where diacritics are critical, technical braille transcription must be used. A diacritic in a word of foreign origin prevents the accented letter from combining with another into a ligature. For example, ''señor'' is not written with the ligature as *, because it would not be clear if the accent were supposed to be on the ''e'' (as ''é'') or on the ''n''. However, English words are contracted. Thus ''blessèd'' is written , and ''coëducational'' is .


Punctuation marks

Braille punctuation is somewhat variable, just as there is variation in printed English between curly and straight quotation marks. They fail to make some distinctions found in print. For example, in EBAE, both opening and closing parentheses are written , with spacing used to distinguish; in UEB, they are and . On the other hand, EBAE distinguishes period vs. decimal point (UEB does not). EBAE and UEB, just like (non-typewriter) print, distinguish apostrophe , right single quotation mark , ditto mark , and right double quotation mark . In EBAE, is the hyphen , the
dash The dash is a punctuation mark consisting of a long horizontal line. It is similar in appearance to the hyphen but is longer and sometimes higher from the baseline. The most common versions are the endash , generally longer than the hyphen ...
, the "double dash" , and is the
ellipsis The ellipsis (, also known informally as dot dot dot) is a series of dots that indicates an intentional omission of a word, sentence, or whole section from a text without altering its original meaning. The plural is ellipses. The term origin ...
. When words or letters are replaced by multiple dashes or dots in print, in EBAE and are used, with a matching number of characters. In UEB, these symbols are , , , and . In EBAE, the reference mark, or "asterisk" (), is used for all reference marks — *, †, ‡, etc., including numbered footnotes. Unlike the asterisk in printed English, it is spaced on both sides, apart from associated footnote letters or numbers, which follow it immediately. So, is transcribed , as is ; the numbered footnote in is written . In UEB, they are distinguished, matching print: , , . The ditto mark, , which occupies two cells, is only used once per line, in contrast to normal practice in print. In addition to being used for apostrophe and capitalization, dot 3 and dot 6 are used as combining characters. In EBAE, they combine with parentheses to form brackets ; and in EBAE & UEB, dot 6 combines with quotation marks to form single quotation marks . Together, they form the ''termination sign'' (ending an all-caps passage). Also , the section mark (§) (UEB: ). The accent mark (here called the ''print symbol indicator'') is used with punctuation when it stands alone, rather than suffixed to a word or number. For example, if someone's response in a dialogue is transcribed , in braille that would be written . It is also used to derive a few symbols in EBAE: , (before a number) / (elsewhere), . In UEB, became , and became (everywhere). In EBAE, "in general literature, the common mathematical signs of operation for + (plus), − (minus), × (times or by), ÷ (divided by), and = (equals) should always be expressed in words. The special mathematical signs should be used only in mathematics and scientific texts.". For example, would be rendered (using as a contraction of the word ) in literary contexts, because EBAE did not have a symbol for (though Nemeth Braille did). In UEB, is , so that phrase would be rendered .


Formatting marks

Braille has several formatting marks, sometimes called "composition signs", "register marks", or "indicators", which have no one-to-one correspondence with printed English. These are the number sign , the letter sign , the capital sign , the italic sign (or more accurately the emphasis sign) , and the termination sign (written cap–apostrophe). These immediately precede the sequence (word or number) they modify, without an intervening space. All characters ''a'' through ''j'' are interpreted as the digits ''1'' through ''0'' when they follow a number sign. This reading ignores intervening numerical and arithmetical symbols such as commas, decimal points, and fraction bars, until a non-number-compatible character, such as a period or a letter after J, is encountered, at which point reading reverts to the alphabetical values ''a–j''. The number sign is repeated after a slash that is not used a fraction bar (like ''model number 15/07''). For example, (one twentieth) is , but 20/20 isionis . The braille number sign has no equivalent in print. It is sometimes transcribed as . However, this is misleading: an actual printed # is rendered in braille as , without an intervening space before the number sign . The letter sign is used to force the end of a series of numbers. For example, preceded by a number sign, , is read as ''41''. If instead ''4a'' is intended (as in a section or apartment number), then the letter sign is used to force a reading of ''a'' rather than ''1'' for the final character: . It is also used to mark a character as standing for a letter rather than for a word. For example, on its own is normally read as the word ''but''; to indicate that it is instead the letter ''b'', the letter sign is used: ''b''. Plurals of letters (''mind your ps and qs'') always use an apostrophe in braille, but other derivations may not, as in ''nth
ime Ime is a village in Lindesnes municipality in Agder county, Norway. The village is located on the east side of the river Mandalselva, along the European route E39 highway. Ime is an eastern suburb of the town of Mandal. Ime might be considered to ...
': is ''Sing'', is ''S-ing/Essing''. The letter sign is also used to mark lower-case Roman numbers, as in . The capital(ization) sign marks the first letter of a word as capitalized. It may occur in the middle of a word for
camel case Camel case (sometimes stylized as camelCase or CamelCase, also known as camel caps or more formally as medial capitals) is the practice of writing phrases without spaces or punctuation. The format indicates the separation of words with a single ...
, as in the name ''deAngelo''. It is doubled to place a word in all caps; this must be repeated for each word of an all-cap text. The emphasis (italic) sign marks emphatic formatting, equivalent to printed italic, bold, underlined, and small-capital text. A single italic sign emphasizes the entire word (or number). For two or three emphasized words, each takes a separate marker. For longer texts, a doubled marker is placed before the first word, and the end of the emphasis is indicated by marking the final emphasized word with a single italic sign. When the capitalization or emphasis does not span the entire word, the beginning and end is marked with a hyphen. However, if the print word already contains a hyphen, the termination sign is used for the end. So, is written , but is . The comma prefixed to a letter indicates that it is to be read as non-Latin, so that for example would be if Greek symbols were being used.


Contractions

Apart from words using the various abbreviations signs, covered in the next section, English Braille utilizes a number of unmarked contractions. These are similar to the contractions found in
shorthand Shorthand is an abbreviated symbolic writing method that increases speed and brevity of writing as compared to longhand, a more common method of writing a language. The process of writing in shorthand is called stenography, from the Greek ''s ...
and stenoscript. As a rule, they are not used where they would obscure the text.


One-letter contractions

:: ''Abolished in Unified English Braille'' ::+ ''Joins with the following word'' The single-letter contractions are: : ''but'', ''can'', ''do'', ''every'', ''from'' and ''-self'', ''go'', ''have'', ''just'', : ''knowledge'', ''like'', ''more'', ''not'', ''people'', ''quite'', ''rather'', ''so'', ''that'', ''still'', : ''us'', ''very'', ''it'', ''you'', ''as'', : ''child'', ''shall'', ''this'', ''which'', ''out'', ''will'', : ''be'' and ''be-'', ''con-'', ''dis-'', ''enough'', ''to'', ''were'', ''his'', ''in'', ''by'' and ''was'', : ''com-'' Note irregular for ''it'', for ''as'', and for ''were''. All 26 basic Latin letters are used apart from , which already form words of their own. These contractions are either independent words or (in the cases of ''con-, com-, dis-, -self'')
affix In linguistics, an affix is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word or word form. Affixes may be derivational, like English ''-ness'' and ''pre-'', or inflectional, like English plural ''-s'' and past tense ''-ed''. They ...
es, as in ''oneself''. They cannot be treated as simple letters. For example, while the letter stands for the pronoun ''it'', it cannot substitute for the sequence ''it'' in the word ''bite''. They cannot be pluralized: * is no good for "(tin) cans". This is true even of ''child'' not being usable for *''grandchild'', nor ''out'' in *''without''. (These must be spelled ''g-r-and-ch-i-l-d'' and ''with-ou-t''.) However, a following apostrophe is acceptable: ''people's'', ''can't'', ''it'll''; as are hyphenated words like ''so-and-so''. This behavior is distinct from ligatures such as and , which are used when the equivalent sequences are found in printed English, as in ''red'' and ''need''. There is no semantic restriction: ''can'' may be either the verb ''can'' or a tin ''can'', and capitalized and are names ''Will'' and ''More''. However, in the few cases where the basic letters would be words in their own right, they must be spelled out to avoid confusion. That is, because stands for ''shall'', it cannot be used for the word ''sh!'', which must be spelled out as ''s-h''. Similarly, can be used for ''St.'' (as either ''Saint'' or ''Street'') when marked as an abbreviation by a period, but otherwise should also be spelled out. ;"Lower" contractions Because contractions that occupy only the lower half of the braille cell mostly double as basic punctuation marks, legibility requires that, with few exceptions, they may not come in contact with actual punctuation marks; if they would, they should instead be spelled out. That is, any cell which follows without an intervening space should contain a dot in its top row. Most of the difficulties of when to use contractions are due to this complication. The whole-word contractions of the fifth decade are ''be'', ''enough'', ''to'', ''were'', ''his'', ''in'', ''by/was''. If one of these words occurs at the end of a sentence, or before a comma, it must be spelled out (though "enough" would still be partially contracted to ''en-ou-gh''.) They cannot even be used in hyphenated words such as ''bride-to-be''. However, much like Arabic prepositions, the prepositions , , and join with a following word without an intervening space. This prevents from being read as 'was'. That is, in ''He came by to see us'', "by to see" is written as one word, . Word-joining is allowed as long as the upper half of the braille cell (dot 1 or 4) is used in the final word; ''to, by, into'' do join with ''in, enough, be, his, was, were'', but the second word is spelled out. The fifth-decade prefixes (''be-, dis-, con-'') may only be used if they occur at the beginning of a word (including in a compound word after a hyphen, or after ''by, to, into'') and form a whole syllable. That is, they cannot be used in the words ''been, disk, conch'' nor (apart from double-duty ''be'') as words in their own right, as in ''con artist''. ''Com-'' is similar, but need not constitute a syllable: it is used for example in ''come'' and ''comb''. However, because it uses only the bottom row of the cell, like the hyphen and the apostrophe, it cannot come in contact with either.


Longer contractions

Longer unmarked contractions are the following. Ligatures, such as in ''against'', are underlined here for clarity. : ''about'', ''above'', ''according'', ''across'', ''after'', ''afternoon'', ''afterward'', ''again'', ''against'', ''also'', ''almost'', ''already'', ''altogether'', ''although'', ''always'' : ''because'', ''before'', ''behind'', ''below'', ''beneath'', ''beside'', ''between'', ''beyond'' : ''blind'', ''Braille'' : ''could'', ''-ceive'', ''-ceiving'' : ''children'' : ''declare'', ''declaring'' : ''either'' : ''first'', ''friend'' : ''good'', ''great'' : ''herself'', ''him'', ''himself'' : ''immediate'' : ''little'', ''letter'' : ''much'', ''must'', ''myself'' : ''necessary'', ''neither'' : ''o'clock'' : ''ourselves'' : ''paid'', ''perhaps'' : ''quick'' : ''rejoice'', ''rejoicing'' : ''such'', ''said'' : ''should'' : ''today'', ''together'', ''tomorrow'', ''tonight'' : ''themselves'' : ''would'' : ''its'', ''itself'' : ''your'', ''yourself'', ''yourselves'' These can only form longer words that are derivations of them and retain their meaning. For example, ''above'' in ''aboveboard'', ''necessary'' in ''unnecessary'', ''conceive'' in ''misconceive'', and ''good'' in ''goodness'' are all well-formed braille, but not ''should'' in *''shoulder'' nor ''said'' in *''Port Said''. Nor can they be used if a final ''-e'' is dropped, as in ''declaration''. (This is why special ''-ing'' forms are available for ''declaring, rejoicing'', and ''-ceiving'': the ''-ing'' suffix would not work.) They may be used as proper nouns (when capitalized), but not as parts of proper nouns. For example, ''little'' is acceptable for the name ''Little'', but may not be used within ''Doolittle''; similarly, the contraction for ''good'' may not be used in the name ''Goody''. (There are too many unpredictable names for this to be workable.) ''After'', ''blind'' and ''friend'' may only be used in longer words when followed by a consonant. (They are too ambiguous otherwise.)


Abbreviations

Besides unmarked contractions, words are abbreviated with any of several abbreviation signs. All of these signs use only the right-hand side of the braille cell. , , and mark ''initial abbreviations'', combining with the initial braille letter of a word. The italic sign , letter sign , and capital sign mark ''final abbreviations'', combining with the final letter of a sequence, commonly a suffix.


Initial abbreviations

(The combining initial letter is written here in boldface, as it does not always correspond to the initial letter of printed orthography.) * forms the words ''here,'' ''there,'' ''where,'' ''ever,'' ''ought,'' ''father,'' ''mother,'' ''name,'' ''character,'' ''question,'' ''know,'' ''lord,'' ''one,'' ''day,'' ''some,'' ''part,'' ''time,'' ''right,'' ''through,'' ''under,'' ''work,'' ''young'' * forms the words ''these,'' ''those,'' ''upon,'' ''whose,'' ''word'' * forms the words ''cannot,'' ''many,'' ''had,'' ''their,'' ''spirit,'' ''world'' In general, these are acceptable as parts of longer words as long as they retain their pronunciation. There are three main exceptions to this: * need not keep its odd pronunciation, as long as the ''o'' and ''n'' fall in the same syllable * needs to form a complete syllable, as in ''chromosome (ch-r-o-m-o-some)'' * cannot be used in ''partake'' or its derivatives As can be seen from ''chromosome'', the pronunciation requirement is rather loose. Given the difficulty of English speakers in agreeing on where syllable breaks fall, syllable requirements are also loosely construed in braille: they do not follow the rigid application of a dictionary.


Final abbreviations

* forms the sequences ''-ound,'' ''-ount,'' ''-ance,'' ''-less,'' ''-sion'' * forms the sequences ''-ong,'' ''-ful,'' ''-ment,'' ''-ence,'' ''-ness,'' ''-tion,'' ''-ity'' * Capital stands for the suffix ''-ally'', and for ''-ation''.Eliminated in Unified English Braille These cannot follow an apostrophe or hyphen. They cannot form independent words like *''ally'' or *''less'', nor can they occur at the beginning of a word like *''ancestor'' or *''lesson''. However, then can usually occur elsewhere: ''c-ount, ar-ound''. They may be used across syllables, as in ''c-ance-r''. is used for the suffix ''-ess'' after ''n'', though not after ''en'' or ''in'', as in ''baroness (b-ar-o-ness)'' and ''lioness'', but not in ''chieftainess (ch-i-e-f-t-a-in-e-s-s)''. ''-full'' does not use in order to preserve the parallel with the independent word ''full''. However, ''-ful'' and ''-fully'' do. When there are several ways to write a word, the shortest one is chosen, and when they are of equal length, the one without (two-cell) abbreviations is chosen. So, ''thence'' is written ''th-ence'' (3 cells) rather than ''the-n-c-e'' (4 cells). However, with the sequences ''-anced, -ancer, -enced, -encer'', the form with ''-ance/-ence'' is used even if not shorter. Braille also uses print abbreviations such as ''ea., Mon., Sept., etc.,'' in which case the period is used as in print.


Spacing

A single space (a blank cell, which has the same width as all other cells) is left between words and sentences. Paragraphs are indented with a double space. This is universal in braille, even when transcribing a printed text that does not indent paragraphs: Blank lines are not used for this in braille, though they may be used for changes of scene, etc. As much as possible, lines continue to the right margin, with words divided and hyphenated to fit. If this would cause an illegal sequence of ligature or contraction and hyphen, the spelling needs to be decomposed, or the word hyphenated differently. The full cell is used to over-type and strike out errors when using a braille writer. (Mistakes may also be erased by smoothing them out, but this runs the risk of making the corrected letter illegible.) The full cell may also indicate a missing value in a table. It can also function more generally as a column marker to keep the data in a table aligned. For example, a row in a table of punctuation, where the columns contain symbols of different lengths, could be written, : : (For an illustration of such use, see the alphabet chart in the box at Russian Braille, where a column marker sets off each letter of the alphabet and each mark of punctuation.)


Unified English Braille

Unified English Braille (UEB) is an attempted unified standard for English Braille, proposed in 1991 to the Braille Authority of North America (BANA). The motivation for UEB was that the proliferation of specialized braille codes—which sometimes assigned conflicting values to even basic letters and numbers—was threatening not just braille-literacy, but also the viability of English braille itself. Also, the irregularities of English Braille made automated transcription inaccurate, and therefore increased the cost and time required to print in braille. In 1993, the UEB project was adopted by the International Council on English Braille, and expanded to cover the various national systems of the member states: Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Nigeria, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. An additional goal became adoption of a single standard for all braille encoding, apart from
music Music is generally defined as the art of arranging sound to create some combination of form, harmony, melody, rhythm or otherwise expressive content. Exact definitions of music vary considerably around the world, though it is an aspe ...
; with the exception of math-notation, this was largely achieved. New Zealand officially retains Māori Braille as compatible with UEB, and BANA officially retains Nemeth Code as a math-notation option alongside UEB for the United States. In the finalized form as of 2013, UEB upgrades English Braille Grade 2 (the literary coding used in several slightly variable forms in different countries), obsoletes
Computer Braille Code Computer Braille is an adaptation of braille for precise representation of computer-related materials such as programs, program lines, computer commands, and filenames. Unlike standard 6-dot braille scripts, but like Gardner–Salinas braille codes ...
by making email/website/programming syntax part of literary coding, and in some ways competes with
Nemeth Code The Nemeth Braille Code for Mathematics is a Braille code for encoding mathematical and scientific notation linearly using standard six-dot Braille cells for tactile reading by the visually impaired. The code was developed by Abraham Nemeth. Th ...
by adding additional math-notation (albeit Taylor-style with the numerals overwriting letters rather than overwriting punctuation as in Nemeth) to the literary coding. Compared to the American standard described in this article, Unified English has the following differences: #Readings: Several have been eliminated, due to ambiguity or translation problems: the letters ''dd'' and ''-ble'', the contractions ''by, com-, to, into,'' and ''o'clock,'' and the capitalized abbreviations ''-ally'' and ''-ation.'' #Spacing: Words such as ''and the'' are to be spaced in braille just as they are in print (formerly they were typically run together as ''andthe'') #Formatting: Bold, underline, and italics now have separate formatting marks (formerly it was impossible to distinguish between underlined-braille and italicized-braille). A triple capital sign now indicates a passage in all-caps. #Punctuation: New opening and closing parentheses and (which previously were ambiguous). Various brackets, quotation marks, dashes, and other punctuation (including notably mathematical and arithmetical notations such as the equals sign) have been added, so that printed text can be reproduced less ambiguously. #Uniformity: UEB is likely to become the worldwide standard for English-language braille (see full article for details) #Extensibility: provisions have been made for adding new symbols, without causing new conflicts #Miscellaneous changes: various other differences exist The following punctuation is retained: The Grade 2 single opening quotation mark is also retained, but the closing equivalent is changed. The right-side abbreviation and formatting marks are used to derive quotation marks and mathematical symbols, by combining them with lower-half punctuation and four letters which graphically resemble ( ) / \. In addition, the accent mark is used to derive the following. At least the first, the ampersand, is the same as usage in American Grade-2 Braille, and at least the dollar sign is different.


Sample

The following text is the same in American Grade 2 and Unified English Braille: Article 1 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is an international document adopted by the United Nations General Assembly that enshrines the rights and freedoms of all human beings. Drafted by a UN committee chaired by Eleanor Roosevelt ...
: : : :''All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.''


See also

* Braille Challenge * Braille Institute of America * National Braille Association * Unified English Braille * Nemeth Braille * Gardner–Salinas braille codes


References


External links


Dictionaries


BRL online contraction dictionaryDuxbury charts for Grade-2 Braille: American (BANA), British (BAUK), and UEB


Organizations


Association Valentin HaüyBraille Authority of North AmericaRoyal National Institute For The BlindPerkins School for the BlindNational Braille Press
– offers
Alternate Text Production CenterAccessible Media CenterNational Braille Association, Inc.Braille Institute of America


Libraries


The National Library for the BlindWashington Talking Book & Braille Library
– serving residents of the State of Washington, USA * Braille Institute
Online Public Access Catalog


Learning


Braille Bug – an educational site for kids, from the American Foundation for the BlindBRL: Braille Through Remote LearningOn-line Braille Course of University of São PauloEnglish Braille, American Edition 1994, 2002 revision. (The official standard from the Braille Authority of North America)Instruction manual for Braille Transcribing (New 2009 Edition) from the Library of Congress Braille Transcription and Certification Program


History


Proceedings of "Braille 1809–2009: Writing with six dots and its future"
international conference held at the Headquarters of UNESCO (Paris) from 5 to 8 January 2009
Louis Braille Online Museum
Exhibit tracing the history of braille and the life of Louis Braille.

a detailed history of Braille's origins and the people who supported and opposed the system.

1955, gives a history of the "War of the Dots" that ultimately led to the adoption of the English form of the Braille literary code in the United States and the demise of American Braille and
New York Point New York Point (New York Point: ) is a braille-like system of tactile writing for the blind invented by William Bell Wait (1839–1916), a teacher in the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind. The system used one to four pairs of poi ...
, its main competitors.
Making a Newspaper For Sightless Readers: By means of raised dots and lines embossed on manila paper, news of the world is conveyed to the fingertips of the blind
Popular Science ''Popular Science'' (also known as ''PopSci'') is an American digital magazine carrying popular science content, which refers to articles for the general reader on science and technology subjects. ''Popular Science'' has won over 58 awards, incl ...
(monthly, January 1919, page 24–25, Scanned by Google Books)


Documents


English Braille: American EditionThe Rules of Unified English Braille
( PDF)
Library of Congress ''Instructional Manual for Braille Transcribing''
(including information specific to British Braille)


Legal




Computer resources



( Wayback Machine copy)
Free Braille fontsFree Unicode Braille TTF font (supports all Braille scripts)
{{Description of English Assistive technology * Character encoding Latin-script representations French-ordered braille alphabets