Hawaiian Braille

Hawaiian Braille is the braille alphabet of the Hawaiian language. It is a subset of the basic braille alphabet, supplemented by an additional letter ⠸ to mark long vowels: (Māori Braille uses the same convention for long vowels.) Unlike print Hawaiian, which has a special letter ʻokina for the glottal stop, Hawaiian Braille uses the apostrophe ⠄, which behaves as punctuation rather than as a consonant: ⠄⠸⠁⠊⠝⠁ ʻāina⠄⠠⠸⠁⠊⠝⠁ ʻĀina That is, the order to write ʻĀ is apostrophe, cap sign, length sign, A. Punctuation is as in English Braille.

Hawaiian Braille

Hawaiian Braille is the braille alphabet of the Hawaiian language. It is a subset of the basic braille alphabet, supplemented by an additional letter ⠸ to mark long vowels: (Māori Braille uses the same convention for long vowels.) Unlike print Hawaiian, which has a special letter ʻokina for the glottal stop, Hawaiian Braille uses the apostrophe ⠄, which behaves as punctuation rather than as a consonant: ⠄⠸⠁⠊⠝⠁ ʻāina⠄⠠⠸⠁⠊⠝⠁ ʻĀina That is, the order to write ʻĀ is apostrophe, cap sign, length sign, A. Punctuation is as in English Braille.