Ghanaian braille explained

Several braille alphabets are used in Ghana. For English, Unified English Braille has been adopted. Four other languages have been written in braille: Akan (Twi), Ga, Ewe, and Dagaare. All three alphabets are based on the basic braille letter values of basic Latin alphabet:

Basic braille alphabet
abcdefghijklm
nopqrstuvwxyz

The braille equivalents of print letters beyond these are described below. English Braille punctuation is used in both Ghana and (according to UNESCO 2013) Togo.

Braille is not in active use in Ghana for any language but English. However, there are some older publications in these braille alphabets.

Akan (Twi) Braille

Twi Braille
Also Known As:Akan Braille
Type:alphabet
Languages:Twi
Fam1:Braille
Fam2:English Braille
Note:none

Akan has one extra vowel letters. ɔ could be expected from international/African norms; ɛ is specific to Ghana.


ɔ

ɛ

Ga and Dagaare Braille

Ga Braille
Also Known As:Dagaare Braille
Type:alphabet
Languages:Ga, Dagaare
Fam1:Braille
Fam2:English Braille
Note:none

Ga and Dagaare add a third extra letter, ŋ.


ɔ

ɛ

ŋ

Ewe Braille

Ewe Braille
Type:alphabet
Languages:Ewe
Fam1:Braille
Fam2:English Braille
Note:none

Ewe adds several additional consonants: ɖ, ƒ, ɣ, ʋ.


ɔ

ɛ

ŋ

ɖ

ƒ

ɣ

ʋ

The ɖ and ɣ are the international/African norm (see also Nigerian braille); ƒ and ʋ are from the English th sounds, the closest approximation in that language after f and v.

Braille for Togolese languages

Ewe is the primary language of Togo, and is evidently used in Togo with the same braille assignments as in Ghana. UNESCO (2013 [1990]) reports several additional Togolese alphabets it was unable to confirm, but which were designed in conjunction with the Ghanaian languages; they evidently use the Ghanaian Ewe assignments:

In addition, UNESCO reports that various Togolese languages have for nasal vowels, for high tone, for mid tone, and for low tone.

All five of these languages are spoken in Ghana as well as Togo, but Unesco does not report on them being reduced to braille there.

References