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Braille Basics
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History of Braille Developed by Louis Braille
1809—Born near Paris, France 1813—Lost his vision 1819—Attended Parisian blind school 1821—Charles Barbier introduced 12-dot “Night Writing” 1827—First Braille book published
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Braille Overview Uncontracted (formerly Grade One) Braille consists of the 26-letter alphabet, numbers, and punctuation. Contracted (formerly Grade Two) Braille adds 189 contractions and short-form words.
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Braille Cell All Braille characters are based on six dots called a Braille cell.
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A through J The first 10 letters of the alphabet are made using the top four dots in the Braille cell (dots ).
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K through T The next 10 letters of the alphabet are made by adding dot three to the first 10 letters.
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U through Z The last six letters of the alphabet are created by adding dot 6. What happened to “W”? It was added later and does not quite fit the pattern.
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Braille Alphabet
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That’s nice, but… How do we remember the alphabet?
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Braille and Print You already know the print alphabet, and the Braille letters look like the print letters. Let’s connect the dots!
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Standard Braille Alphabet
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Connect the Dots
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Numbers Braille uses a special sign (dots ) to show that what follows is a number. Logically, this sign is called…the number sign!
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Letters to Numbers Braille uses the first 10 letters of the alphabet, preceded by the number sign, to stand for the single-digit numbers. “a” is 1, “b” is 2, “c” is 3, etc. through “j,” which is 0
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Numbers in Literary Braille
3 = #c 4 = #d 5 = #e 6 = #f 7 = #g 8 = #h 9 = #i 0 = #j
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Multidigit Numbers 12 = #ab 25 = #be 30 = #cj 46 = #df 51 = #ea 63 = #fc 74 = #gd 87 = #hg 99 = #ii 101 = #aja
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More Information Braille references BANA
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