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Braille

[ US /ˈbɹeɪɫ/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈe‍ɪl/ ]
NOUN
  1. French educator who lost his sight at the age of three and who invented a system of writing and printing for sightless people (1809-1852)

How To Use Braille In A Sentence

  • Braille music uses the same system of raised dots on paper as standard Braille, with the top four dots in a block of six giving the note and the bottom two indicating its duration.
  • Kathi adds: Enjoy a few pix from the Council's recent Braille Bicentennial Birthday Party. French Word-A-Day:
  • Sunday school lessons for the blind that were put in Braille, and this required skill because, since Braille is so expensive to produce, anything in the way of a religious lesson had to be not only undenominational but unsectarian [unknown] So, of course, Oral History Interview with Broadus Mitchell, August 14 and 15, 1977. Interview B-0024. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • In addition, there are no reference books about the exam written in Braille.
  • Artifacts, photos, and electronic displays present such topics as the development of braille, the history of the braillewriter, and the history of Talking Books. Fred's Head from APH
  • Reading matter is transcribed into Braille for her, and she also uses audiotapes.
  • An electronic braillewriter is not unlike an electric typewriter, but has many more capabilities.
  • With the help of a vision impairment teacher, the class worked on braillewriters to emboss cards and letters.
  • A stroke subsequently damaging the visual area in a female blind from birth, destroyed her ability to read Braille by touch; clearly her visual cortex had earlier been recruited for tactual processing.
  • Many people rely on pinyin-to-character conversion programmes to send text messages or type on their computers and even Chinese Braille is based on the system.
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