Irish Braille
Irish Braille is the braille alphabet of the Irish language. It is augmented by specifically Irish letters for vowels that take acute accents in print: ⠿ é and ⠾ ú are only coincidentally the French Braille letters for é and ù: They are simply the braille letters of the third decade after z, assigned to print in alphabetical order. Irish Braille also uses some of the Grade-1½ shortcuts of English Braille, *⠜ only has the value ar in prose. In poetry, it is used to mark a new line, like "/" in print. †Abolished in Updated Irish Braille (see below)
Irish Braille
Irish Braille is the braille alphabet of the Irish language. It is augmented by specifically Irish letters for vowels that take acute accents in print: ⠿ é and ⠾ ú are only coincidentally the French Braille letters for é and ù: They are simply the braille letters of the third decade after z, assigned to print in alphabetical order. Irish Braille also uses some of the Grade-1½ shortcuts of English Braille, *⠜ only has the value ar in prose. In poetry, it is used to mark a new line, like "/" in print. †Abolished in Updated Irish Braille (see below)
has abstract
Irish Braille is the braille a ...... he same as in English Braille.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
36.854.215
Wikipage revision ID
705.556.622
name
comment
Irish Braille is the braille a ...... ated Irish Braille (see below)
@en
label
Irish Braille
@en