Braille code where the word
⠏⠗⠑⠍⠊⠑⠗ (
premier,
French for "first") can be read.
The braille system, devised in 1821 by Frenchman Louis
Braille, is a method that is widely used by blind people to read and write. Each
braille character or cell is made up of six dot positions, arranged in a rectangle
containing two columns of three dots each. A dot may be raised at any of the six positions to form sixty-four (26)
combinations, including the combination in which no dots are raised. For reference purposes, a particular combination may be
described by naming the positions where dots are raised, the positions being universally numbered 1 to 3, from top to bottom, on
the left, and 4 to 6, from top to bottom, on the right. For example, dots 1-3-4 would describe a cell with three dots raised, at
the top and bottom in the left column and on top of the right column, i.e., the letter m. In braille, pages are separated
by a line so that you can feel going across the page.
The braille system was based on a method of communication originally developed by Charles
Barbier in response to Napoleon's demand for a code that soldiers could use to communicate silently and without light at night called night writing. Barbier's system was too complex for soldiers to learn, and was rejected by the military;
in 1821 he visited the National Institute for the Blind in Paris, France, where he met Louis Braille. Braille identified the major failing of the code, which was that the human
finger could not encompass the whole symbol without moving, and so could not move rapidly from one symbol to another. His
modification was to use a 6 dot cell — the braille system — which revolutionized written communication for the blind.
The Braille alphabet
Braille can be seen as the world's first binary encoding scheme for representing the characters of a
writing system. The system as originally invented by Braille consists of two parts:
- A character encoding for mapping characters of the French language to tuples of six bits or
dots.
- A way of representing six-bit characters as raised dots in a Braille cell.
Today different braille codes (or code pages) are
used to map character sets of different languages to the six bit cells. Different braille codes are also used for different uses
like mathematics and music. However, because the six-dot Braille cell only offers 64 possible combinations, of which some are
omitted because they feel the same (having the same dots pattern in a different position), many Braille characters have different
meanings based on their context. Therefore, character mapping is not one-to-one.
In addition to simple encoding, modern braille transcription uses contractions
to increase reading speed. (See: Grade 2 Braille)
The Braille cell
Braille generally consists of cells of 6 raised dots arranged in a grid of two dots
horizontally by three dots vertically. The dots are conventionally numbered 1, 2, and 3 from the top of the leftward column and
4, 5, and 6 from the top of the rightward column.
The presence or absence of dots gives the coding for the symbol. Dot height is approximately 0.02 inches (0.5 mm); the
horizontal and vertical spacing between dot centers within a braille cell is approximately 0.1 inches (2.5 mm); the blank space
between dots on adjacent cells is approximately 0.15 inches (3.75 mm) horizontally and 0.2 inches (5.0 mm) vertically. A standard
braille page is 11 inches by 11.5 inches and typically has a maximum of 40 to 43 braille cells per line and 25 lines.
Large Cell Braille
Large Cell Braille, or more commonly "Jumbo Braille", is an alternate way of writing Braille. The dot combinations are the
same as those used in traditional Braille, except that the spacing between dots and cells is increased somewhat. The dots
themselves are the same size as dots in standard braille.
Large Cell Braille is used by those who have difficulty feeling standard Braille.
Encoding
As originally conceived by Louis Braille, a sequence of characters, using the top 4
dots of the braille cell, represents letters a through j. Dot 3 is added to
each of the a through j symbols to give letters k through t. Both of the bottom dots (dots 3 and 6) are added to the symbols for "a"
through e to give letters u, v, x, y, and
z. The letter w is an exception to the pattern because French did not make use of the letter "w" at the time Louis Braille devised his alphabet, and thus he
had no need to encode the letter "w".
English braille codes the letters and punctuation, and some double
letter signs and word signs directly, but capitalization and numbers are dealt with by using a prefix symbol. In practice, braille produced in the United Kingdom does not have capital letters.
There are braille codes for representing shorthand (produced on a machine which embosses a
paper tape) and for representing mathematics (Nemeth
Braille) and musical notation (braille
music).
Writing braille
Braille may be produced using a slate and a stylus in which each dot is created from the back of the page,
writing in mirror image, by hand, or it may be produced on a braille typewriter or Perkins
Brailler, or produced by a braille embosser attached to a computer. It may
also be rendered using a refreshable braille display.
Braille has been extended to an 8-dot code, particularly for use with braille embossers and refreshable braille displays. In
8-dot braille the additional dots are added at the bottom of the cell, giving a matrix 4 dots high by 2 dots wide. The additional
dots are given the numbers 7 (for the lower-left dot) and 8 (for the lower-right dot). 8-dot braille has the advantages that the
case of an individual letter is directly coded in the cell containing the letter and that all the printable ASCII characters can be represented in a single cell. All 256 (28) possible combinations of 8 dots are
encoded by the Unicode standard. Braille with six dots is frequently stored as braille ASCII.
Letters and numbers
Other symbols
The question mark is dots 2,3,6 which you may notice is the same as the opening quotation mark. Therefore the placement of the
dots -before a word or after a word- will determine which symbol it is.
Opening and closing parentheses are shown with the same symbol. Therefore, the placement context will determine whether the
parentheses is opening or closing.
Grade 2 Braille Contractions
This is just a small sample of some of the contractions that are used in Grade 2 Braille. More information about Grade 2
Braille is below in the section on Braille transcription.
Unicode rendering table
The Unicode standard encodes 8-dot Braille glyphs according to their binary appearance, rather than following the alphabetic
order of any particular convention. Unicode defines the "Braille Patterns" character block in the hex codepoint range from 2800
to 28FF.
| Braille |
Letter |
|
Braille |
Letter |
| ⠁ |
A 1 |
⠞ |
T |
| ⠃ |
B 2 |
⠥ |
U |
| ⠉ |
C 3 |
⠧ |
V |
| ⠙ |
D 4 |
⠺ |
W |
| ⠑ |
E 5 |
⠭ |
X |
| ⠋ |
F 6 |
⠽ |
Y |
| ⠛ |
G 7 |
⠵ |
Z |
| ⠓ |
H 8 |
⠠ |
Capital sign |
| ⠊ |
I 9 |
⠼ |
Number sign |
| ⠚ |
J 0 |
⠲ |
Period |
| ⠅ |
K |
⠂ |
Comma |
| ⠇ |
L |
⠦ |
Question mark |
| ⠍ |
M |
⠆ |
Semicolon |
| ⠝ |
N |
⠖ |
Exclamation mark |
| ⠕ |
O |
⠦ |
Opening quote |
| ⠏ |
P |
⠴ |
Closing quote |
| ⠟ |
Q |
⠶ |
Bracket |
| ⠗ |
R |
⠤ |
Hyphen |
| ⠎ |
S |
|
|
Braille transcription
Braille on a box of tablets
Although it is possible to transcribe braille by simply substituting the equivalent braille character for its printed
equivalent, such a character-by-character transcription (known as Grade 1 Braille) is used only by beginners.
Braille characters are much larger than their printed equivalents, and the standard 11" by 11.5" (28 cm × 30 cm) page has room
for only 25 lines of 43 characters. To reduce space and increase reading speed, virtually all braille books are transcribed in
what is known as Grade 2 Braille, which uses a system of contractions to reduce space and speed the process of reading. As
with most human linguistic activities, Grade 2 Braille embodies a complex system of customs, styles, and practices. The Library
of Congress's Instruction Manual for Braille
Transcribing runs to nearly 200 pages. Braille transcription is skilled work, and braille transcribers need to pass
certification tests.
In English, the system of Grade 2 Braille contractions begins with a set of 23 words which are contracted to single
characters. Thus the word but is contracted to the single letter b, can to c, do to d,
and so on. Even this simple rule creates issues requiring special cases; for example, d is, specifically, an abbreviation
of the verb do; the noun do representing the note of the musical scale is a different word, and must be spelled
out.
Portions of words may be contracted, and many rules govern this process. For example, the character with dots 2-3-5 (the
letter "f" lowered in the braille cell) stands for "ff" when used in the middle of a word. At the beginning of a word, this same
character stands for the word "to" although the character is written in braille with no space following it. At the end of a word,
the same character represents an exclamation point.
The contraction rules take into account the linguistic structure of the word; thus, contractions are not to be used when their
use would alter the usual braille form of a base word to which a prefix or suffix has been added. And some portions of the
transcription rules are not fully codified and rely on the judgement of the transcriber. Thus, when the contraction rules permit
the same word in more than one way, preference is given to "the contraction that more nearly approximates correct
pronunciation."
Grade 3 Braille is a system that includes many additional contractions, almost a shorthand; it is not used for
publication, but is used mostly for individuals for their personal convenience.
The current series of Canadian banknotes have raised dots on the banknotes that
indicate the denomination and can be easily identified by visually impaired people; this 'tactile feature' does not use standard braille but, instead, a system developed in
consultation with blind and visually impaired Canadians after research indicated that not all potential users read braille.
Though braille is thought to be the main way blind people read and write, in Britain (for example) out of the reported 2
million visually impaired population, it is estimated that only around 15-20 thousand people use Braille. Younger people are
turning to electronic text on computers instead; a more portable communication method that they can also use with their friends.
A debate has started on how to make braille more attractive and for more teachers to be available to teach it.
In India there are instances where the parliament acts have been published in Braille too.
For example 'The
Right to Information Act'
Braille for other scripts
- See main articles: Hebrew braille, Japanese
braille, Korean braille, Vietnamese
braille and Tibetan braille, Chinese
braille.
The information about the historic site of
Safdarjung’s tomb in
Delhi,
India. The braille plate is installed near the English version of the
same.
The English version of the braille plate.
There are many extensions of Braille for additional letters with diacritics, such as ç,
ô, é.
When braille is adapted to languages which do not use the Latin alphabet, the blocks
are generally assigned to the new alphabet according to how it is transliterated into the Latin alphabet, and the alphabetic
order of the national script (and therefore the natural order of Latin braille) is disregarded. Such is the case with Russian,
Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, and Chinese. In Greek, for example, gamma is written as Latin g, despite the fact that it
has the alphabetic position of c; Hebrew bet, the second letter of the alphabet and cognate with the Latin letter b, is sometimes pronounced /b/ and sometimes /v/, and is written b
or v accordingly; Russian ts is written as c, which is the usual letter for /ts/ in those Slavic languages
that use the Latin alphabet; and Arabic f is written as f, despite being historically p, and occurring in
that part of the Arabic alphabet (between historic o and q). Esperanto letters
with circumflexes, ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ and ŝ, are written as those letters without circumflexes with a
filled sixth dot. Therefore the letter ĵ has the same representation as the English w and to write a w in
Esperanto, the dot 3 is filled (dots 2-3-4-5-6 are used for w instead of dots 2-4-5-6) The ŭ, used in Esperanto
also, is as the u but the first dot is moved to the fourth place.
Greater differences occur in Chinese braille. In the case of Mandarin Braille,
which is based on Zhuyin rather than the Latin Pinyin
alphabet, the traditional Latin braille values are used for initial consonants and the simple vowels. However, there are
additional blocks for the tones, diphthongs, and vowel + consonant combinations. Cantonese
Braille is also based on Latin braille for many of the initial consonants and simple vowels (based on romanizations of a
century ago), but the blocks pull double duty, with different values depending on whether they're placed in syllable-initial or
syllable-final position. For instance, the block for Latin k represents old-style Cantonese k (g in
Yale and other modern romanizations) when initial, but aak when final, while
Latin j represents Cantonese initial j but final oei.
However, at least three adaptations of Braille have completely reassigned the Latin sound values of the blocks. These are,
Japanese braille, Korean braille, and Tibetan braille.
In Japanese Braille, alphabetic signs for a consonant and vowel are combined into a single syllabic block; in Korean Braille,
the consonants have different syllable-initial and syllable-final forms. These modifications made Braille much more compatible
with Japanese kana and Korean hangul, but meant that the Latin
sound values could not be maintained.
In French Braille, because of the letters not in the English alphabet, those extra letters are assigned cells which are used
for contractions in English Braille. Because of this, grade 2 Braille cannot be used and therefor French Braille is in
uncontracted Braille (or grade 1 Braille) only.
See also
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Organizations
Libraries
Learning
History
- How Braille Began -- a detailed
history of braille's origins and the people who supported and opposed the system.
- Robert B. Irwin's As I Saw
It, 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, its main competitors.
Documents
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