South African braille explained

Several braille alphabets are used in South Africa. For English, Unified English Braille has been adopted. Nine other languages have been written in braille: Afrikaans, Ndebele, Sesotho, Northern Sotho, Swazi, Tswana, Venda, Xhosa, and Zulu.[1] All print alphabets are restricted to the basic Latin alphabet, with diacritics in some cases; the braille alphabets are likewise basic braille with additional letters to render the diacritics.

Basic braille alphabet
abcdefghijklm
nopqrstuvwxyz

The Nguni languages – Ndebele, Swazi, Xhosa, and Zulu – have no diacritics and will not be discussed further. The braille diacritics are shared by South African languages and are described in the sections that follow.

Punctuation for all South African braille alphabets is as in English Braille.

Afrikaans Braille

Afrikaans Braille
Type:alphabet
Languages:Afrikaans
Fam1:Braille
Fam2:South African
Print:Afrikaans alphabet
Note:none

Afrikaans has braille cells for acute, ; grave, ; circumflex, ; and diaeresis, :

á, é, í, ó, ú, ý

à, è

ê, î, ô, û

ë, ï, ö, ü

Sesotho and Tswana Braille

Sotho Braille
Also Known As:Tswana Braille
Type:alphabet
Languages:Sesotho, Northern Sotho, Tswana
Fam1:Braille
Fam2:South African
Print:Sesotho alphabet
Tswana alphabet
Note:none

Sesotho and Tswana treat the caron (haček) as an acute:

ê, ô, : š

Venda Braille

Venda Braille
Type:alphabet
Languages:Venda
Fam1:Braille
Fam2:South African
Note:none

Venda has a unique letter,, for the subscript circumflex, and treats as acute:

, , , ,

References

  1. Ethnologue 17 reports that Tsonga is also written in braille.