*** Welcome to piglix ***

Greek Braille

Modern Greek Braille
Type
alphabet
Languages Greek
Parent systems
Braille
Print basis
Greek alphabet
International Greek Braille
Type
alphabet
Languages Greek
Parent systems
Braille
Print basis
Greek alphabet

Greek Braille is the braille alphabet of the Greek language. It is based on international braille conventions, generally corresponding to Latin transliteration. In Greek, it is known as Κώδικας Μπράιγ Kôdikas Mpraig "Braille Code".

There are actually two Greek braille alphabets, which differ in the assignment of a few letters: Modern Greek Braille used in Greece, and International Greek Braille for Greek letters or words used in mathematics or otherwise embedded in English and other languages.

Modern Greek Braille runs as follows:

The accent mark (acute accent) comes before the vowel or diphthong, but after the capitalization sign: ά, Ά, αί. It's not used for diaeresis; ϊ is just .

Digits are the same as in English Braille. Arithmetical symbols are:

International letter assignments differ somewhat from those above. In Modern Greek Braille, for example, the letter omega (ω) is written the same as Latin j, whereas in English or French braille texts it is written as a w, which it resembles in print. Similarly, Modern Greek upsilon is written as Latin y, but in international Greek it's written as u, and the letter eta is inverted.

This alphabet is used, for example, in mathematical notation in an otherwise Latin-braille text. It also forms the basis for Greek letters in the Nemeth Braille and Gardner–Salinas braille codes. It is not used in Greece or Cyprus. In the table below, the letters which differ from Modern Greek Braille are highlighted.


...
Wikipedia

...