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Dzongkha Braille

Braille alphabet used for writing Dzongkha From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Dzongkha Braille or Bhutanese Braille, is the braille alphabet for writing Dzongkha, the national language of Bhutan. It is based on English braille, with some extensions from international usage. As in print, the vowel a is not written.

Quick facts Dzongkha Braille Bhutanese Braille, Script type ...

Despite Dzongkha and Tibetan using nearly the same alphabet in print, the braille alphabets differ radically, with Tibetan Braille closer to German conventions and assigned letter values according to different sound correspondences.

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Alphabet

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[1]

More information Consonant, ka ...
More information Consonant, ta ...
More information Consonant, tsa ...
More information Consonant, ra ...

The reversed letters used in Sanskrit loanwords are indicated with the diacritic :

, , , , .

The vowel "a" is inherent in a consonant letter, and is not written explicitly. Other vowels are written after a consonant as in English Braille. When a vowel occurs at the beginning of a word, the vowel letter is carried by a null consonant :

More information Vowels, a ...

Sanskrit vowel-marking includes:

ཨཿ aḥ, ཨྃ aṃ,

as in ཀིཿ kiḥ, ཀོྃ koṃ.

It's not clear how conjuncts are indicated. However, the conjunct ཀྵ kṣa in Sanskrit loans suggests that the 45 points conjoin two consonants.

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Punctuation

Digits are as in English Braille. Native punctuation (syllable divider, comma, stop) is:

More information Print, Braille ...

Roman punctuation differs from that of English Braille. The question and exclamation marks, for example, are prefixed by a point 6, and .

More information Print, Braille ...
More information Print, Braille ...
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References

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