Geʽez Braille is a collection of braille alphabets for the Ethiopian languages that are written in Geʽez script in print.[citation needed] Letter values are mostly in line with international usage. At least the Amharic language is supported; presumably the extended letters needed for Tigrinya, Tigre and possibly other Ethiopian languages supported as well, but if so that is not recorded in available references.

Geʽez Braille
Amharic Braille
Script type
alphabet
Print basis
Geʽez alphabet
LanguagesAmharic; possibly also Tigrinya, Tigre, etc.
Related scripts
Parent systems

Amharic alphabet

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Amharic Braille is arguably an abugida like the print Geʽez script, but the inherent vowel is epenthetic ə /ɨ/ rather than a /ɐ/. Syllabic letters in ə are the ones used for the consonant itself. Thus the graphic base consonant letter is used for the simple phonemic consonant, as in a true alphabet, with any ə vowel often predictable.

The photograph of the syllabic chart at right shows a blank cell being used for the inherent vowel ə. This is perhaps an artefact of the presentation; UNESCO (2013) shows that is simply not written.[1]

Amharic Braille alphabet
 
 
-u
 
-i
 
-a
 
-e
 
-o
 
-wa
 
h ሀ
 
l ለ
 
ḥ ሐ
 
m መ
 
ś ሠ
 
r ረ
 
s ሰ
 
š ሸ
 
ḳ ቀ
 
b በ
 
t ተ
 
č ቸ
 
ḫ ኀ
 
n ነ
 
ñ ኘ
 
ʾ አ
 
k ከ
 
x ኸ
 
w ወ
 
ʿ ዐ
 
z ዘ
 
ž ዠ
 
y የ
 
d ደ
 
ǧ ጀ
 
g ገ
 
ṭ ጠ
 
č̣ ጨ
 
p̣ ጰ
 
ṣ ጸ
 
ṣ́ ፀ
 
f ፈ
 
p ፐ
 
v ቨ

⟨ə⟩ is not the default vowel in print Amharic, which is instead ⟨ä⟩ (braille ). For most consonants, a is the only vowel that can occur in a Cw- syllable, so -wa has its own letter: . CwV and CyV syllables other than -wa are written with medial w and y:

Amharic syllables
gu gi ga ge go
gwä gwi gwa gwe gwə

Note that -wə is written as if it were -wu, a sequence that does not occur in print.

Tigrinya and Tigrean alphabets

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Numbers

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Ethiopic digits do not follow the international pattern. They are also circumfixed with ... :

1 10
2 20
3 30
4 40
5 50
6 60
7 70
8 80
9 90
10 100 [2]

Western numbers are marked with as in other braille alphabets.

Punctuation

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Native punctuation is as follows:

Print
Braille               

The last is yizet, one of several interlinear tone marks.

There is also Western punctuation:

Print ? ! ... - / *
Braille                    
Print « ... » ‹ ... › ( ... ) [ ... ]
Braille  ...    ...    ...    ...  

References

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  1. ^ Unesco (2013), World Braille Usage, 3rd ed.
  2. ^ The source has ፻ 100 .