Samoan Braille

Samoan Braille
Type
alphabet
Languages Samoan
Parent systems
Print basis
Samoan alphabet

Samoan Braille is the braille alphabet of the Samoan language.[1] It is a subset of the basic braille alphabet,

⠁ (braille pattern dots-1)⠑ (braille pattern dots-15)⠋ (braille pattern dots-124)⠛ (braille pattern dots-1245)⠊ (braille pattern dots-24)⠇ (braille pattern dots-123)⠍ (braille pattern dots-134)⠝ (braille pattern dots-1345)⠕ (braille pattern dots-135)⠏ (braille pattern dots-1234)⠎ (braille pattern dots-234)⠞ (braille pattern dots-2345)⠥ (braille pattern dots-136)⠧ (braille pattern dots-1236)⠓ (braille pattern dots-125)⠅ (braille pattern dots-13)⠗ (braille pattern dots-1235)
aefgilmnopstuvhkr

supplemented by an additional letter to mark long vowels:

⠰ (braille pattern dots-56)⠁ (braille pattern dots-1)⠰ (braille pattern dots-56)⠑ (braille pattern dots-15)⠰ (braille pattern dots-56)⠊ (braille pattern dots-24)⠰ (braille pattern dots-56)⠕ (braille pattern dots-135)⠰ (braille pattern dots-56)⠥ (braille pattern dots-136)
āēīōū

Unlike print Samoan, which has a special letter ʻokina for the glottal stop, Samoan Braille uses the apostrophe , which behaves as punctuation rather than as a consonant. (See Hawaiian Braille, which has a similar setup.)

Samoan Braille has an unusual punctuation mark, a reduplication sign . This is used to indicate that a word is reduplicated, as in segisegi "twilight".

References

  1. UNESCO (2013) World Braille Usage, 3rd edition.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/24/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.