Two-cell Chinese Braille
Two-cell Chinese Braille was designed in the 1970s and is used in parallel with traditional Chinese Braille in China.
Two-cell Chinese Braille | |
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Type | Semisyllabary with characteristics of an abugida
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Languages | Standard Mandarin |
Parent systems | Braille
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Two-cell Chinese Braille | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 漢語雙拼盲文 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 汉语双拼盲文 | ||||||
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Each syllable is rendered with two braille characters. The first combines the initial and medial; the second the rime and tone. The base letters represent the initial and rime; these are modified with diacritics for the medial and tone. Thus each of the braille cells has aspects of an abugida.[2][3]
Braille charts
Onsets
The first cell indicates the initial, generally in dots 1 to 4, and the medial in dots 5 and 6. This design exploits restrictions on co-occurrence of initials and medials to fit all the allowable combinations in a single cell.
The medial -i- is represented by dot 5 (⠐), the medial -u- by dot 6 (⠠), and the medial -ü- by both dots 5 and 6 (⠰). The z c s series is derived from zh ch sh as if they contained a -i- medial; these two series are not distinguished in many Mandarin dialects. As in traditional Chinese Braille, k g h and q j x are unified, as they never contrast.
A null/zero initial (a vowel-initial syllable) is indicated with the null consonant ⠾.
![]() – |
![]() b- |
![]() p- |
![]() m- |
![]() f- |
![]() d- |
![]() t- |
![]() n- |
![]() l- |
![]() g- |
![]() k- |
![]() h- |
![]() zh- |
![]() ch- |
![]() sh- |
![]() r- |
![]() y- |
![]() bi- |
![]() pi- |
![]() mi- |
![]() di- |
![]() ti- |
![]() ni- |
![]() li- |
![]() ji- |
![]() qi- |
![]() xi- |
![]() z- |
![]() c- |
![]() s- |
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![]() w- |
![]() du- |
![]() tu- |
![]() nu- |
![]() lu- |
![]() gu- |
![]() ku- |
![]() hu- |
![]() zhu- |
![]() chu- |
![]() shu- |
![]() ru- | ||||
![]() yu- |
![]() nü- |
![]() lü- |
![]() ju- |
![]() qu- |
![]() xu- |
![]() zu- |
![]() cu- |
![]() su- |
At least one letter in each place of articulation comes from international use (⠖ f, ⠞ ti, ⠇ l, ⠅ k, ⠓ xi, ⠉ zh), with at least some of the others derived from these (cf. ⠅⠃⠁ k h g and ⠍⠋⠉ ch sh zh).
Rimes
The second cell represents the rime, generally in the top half of the cell, and the tone, generally in dots 3 and 6.
Tone 1 (mā) is indicated by dot 3 (⠄), tone 2 (má) by dot 6 (⠠), and tone 3 (mǎ) by dots 3 and 6 (⠤). (In rime -ei, which already contains a dot 3, the dot 3 for tones 1 and 3 is replaced by dot 5 (⠐ or ⠰).) Tone 4 (mà) and neutral/toneless syllables use the basic rime.
A null/zero rime (a syllable ending with medial i u ü) is written with ⠃.
![]() -ì, -ù, -ǜ |
![]() -à |
![]() -è, -ò |
![]() -ài |
![]() -èi |
![]() -ào |
![]() -òu |
![]() -àn |
![]() -èn |
![]() -àng |
![]() -èng |
![]() ![]() èr |
![]() -ī, -ū, -ǖ |
![]() -ā |
![]() -ē, -ō |
![]() -āi |
![]() -ēi |
![]() -āo |
![]() -ōu |
![]() -ān |
![]() -ēn |
![]() -āng |
![]() -ēng |
![]() ![]() ēr |
![]() -í, -ú, -ǘ |
![]() -á |
![]() -é, -ó |
![]() -ái |
![]() -éi |
![]() -áo |
![]() -óu |
![]() -án |
![]() -én |
![]() -áng |
![]() -éng |
![]() ![]() ér |
![]() -ǐ, -ǔ, -ǚ |
![]() -ǎ |
![]() -ě, -ǒ |
![]() -ǎi |
![]() -ěi |
![]() -ǎo |
![]() -ǒu |
![]() -ǎn |
![]() -ěn |
![]() -ǎng |
![]() -ěng |
![]() ![]() ěr |
- ⠃ is the 'zero' rime transcribed as -i after z c s zh ch sh r in pinyin; here it's also used to carry the tone for syllables where the medial is the rime, such as gu or mi. After b p m f, it is equivalent to pinyin -u.
- ⠊ is transcribed in pinyin as o after b p m f w and the medial u; otherwise it's e.
The rime er is written as if it were *ra; this is possible because *ra is not a possible syllable in Mandarin. At the end of a word, ⠔ -r is erhua, as in ⠣⠞⠔ huār (花儿). Within a word, hyphenate erhua (⠔⠤) to avoid confusion with an initial r- in the following syllable.
The exclamation ê is ⠐⠊, yo is ⠈⠊, and o is ⠠⠊, with appropriate modification for tone.
Combining onset and rime
Combinations of onset and rime follow the conventions of zhuyin, and are therefore not obvious from pinyin transcription.
- for pinyin -in, use medial -i- with rime -en; for -ing, use -i- and -eng
- for -un (the equivalent of wen), use -u- and -en; for -ong (the equivalent of weng), use -u- and -eng
- for -iong (the equivalent of yueng, though written yong in pinyin), use -ü- and -eng
Several syllables are palindromes, with the onset and rime written the same:
- ⠾⠾ ǎ, ⠊⠊ bò, ⠪⠪ mó, ⠮⠮ tuǒ, ⠯⠯ nuǎn, ⠗⠗ liāo, ⠧⠧ lǔ, ⠑⠑ jìng, ⠕⠕ qīng, ⠥⠥ kǔn, ⠓⠓ xiào, ⠣⠣ hú, ⠉⠉ zhòu, ⠙⠙ zàng, ⠍⠍ chōu, ⠝⠝ cāng, ⠋⠋ shàn, ⠛⠛ sài
A toneless or 4th-tone zero rime is omitted at the end of a polysyllabic word. (Words ending in ⠔⠃ rì (日) 'day' are an exception, to prevent confusion with the erhua suffix.) When context makes it unambiguous, the zero rime in other tones may also be omitted.
Sandhi is not rendered; rather, the inherent tone of a morpheme is written.
The following are rendered as toneless syllables:
- Interjections and grammatical particles such as 啊 a, 呀 ya, 哇 wa, 吧 ba, 啦 la, 呢 ne, 吗 ma.
- The verbal aspectual suffixes 了 -le, 着 -zhe, 过 -guo
- The nominal suffixes 子 -zi and 头 -tou.
Common abbreviations
- Suffixes
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- Words
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Homophones
Some common homophones are distinguished by prefixing with a dot 4 ⠈ or 5 ⠐, or by dropping the rime:
- tā: 他 (he) ⠎⠞, 她 (she) ⠈⠎⠞, 它 (it) ⠐⠎⠞
- zài: 在 (at) ⠙⠛, 再 (again) ⠈⠙⠛
- shì: 是 (to be) ⠋, 事 (thing) ⠋⠃
- 是 as a suffix is ⠖, like an initial f-
The three grammatical uses of non-tonic de are irregular:
- de: attributive 的 ⠌, adverbial 地 ⠜, complement 得 ⠌⠔
Often printed Chinese can be contracted, compared to speech, as unambiguous where a phonetic rendition such as braille would be ambiguous; in such cases, the sign ⟨⠘⟩ may be used to indicate the omitted syllables. For example, in the clause 露从今夜白 Lù cóng jīnyè bái, 露 lù means 'dew' (colloquial 露水 lùshuǐ). However, there are several other words transcribed ⠧⠃ lù in braille. To clarify, the –水 element of the colloquial word can be added with the ⟨⠘⟩ prefix:
- ⠧⠃⠘⠫⠼⠀⠽⠱⠀⠑⠅⠒⠊⠀⠊⠻
- Lù(shuǐ) cóng jīnyè bái
- 露(水) 从 今夜 白
In other cases a synonym may be provided; here the prefix is ⟨⠸⟩. For example, in print the meaning of
- 两岸猿声啼
- Liǎng'àn yuán shēng tí
- (from both sides, the voices of monkeys cried out)
is clear, but in a phonetic script 猿 yuán 'monkey' and 啼 tí 'cry' can be obscure. The first can be clarified as 猿猴 yuánhóu 'primate' and the second with the parenthetical 叫 jiào 'call':
- ⠗⠽⠾⠋⠘⠀⠲⠫⠘⠃⠩⠋⠕⠀⠞⠣⠸⠑⠓
- Liǎng'àn yuán(hóu) shēng tí (jiào)
- 两岸 猿(猴) 声 啼 (叫)
When longer parenthetical explanations are provided, the sign ⟨⠸⟩ is repeated before each word (not each syllable).
Numbers
Numbers are the same as in other braille alphabets. Use the number sign ⠼ followed by ⠁ 1, ⠃ 2, ⠉ 3, ⠙ 4, ⠑ 5, ⠋ 6, ⠛ 7, ⠓ 8, ⠊ 9, ⠚ 0.
Notes are indicated as ⠔⠼⠁, ⠔⠼⠃, etc., sections as ⠬⠼⠉ etc.
Formatting
emphasis ⠠ proper name ⠨ foreign script ⠰ number ⠼
⠼ is also used for reduplication rather than repeating a syllable or word. When attached to a word, it repeats a syllable; standing alone, it repeats a word:
- ⠳⠧⠼⠬⠎⠼
- xǔxǔ-duōduō
- 许许多多
- ⠓⠙⠕⠫⠐⠀⠼⠐⠀⠼⠰⠂
- Xiàngqián, xiàngqián, xiàngqián!
- 向前, 向前, 向前!
Punctuation
Chinese braille punctuation is based on that of French Braille, but they are generally split between two cells. This gives them the 'full-width' feel of print Chinese, as well as avoiding confusion with letters.
clausal comma ⟨,⟩ ⠐ phrasal comma ⟨、⟩ ⠠ full stop / period ⟨。⟩ ⠐⠆ question mark ⟨?⟩ ⠐⠄ exclamation mark ⟨!⟩ ⠰⠂ wave dash ⟨〜⟩ ⠤ interpunct ⟨·⟩ ⠐⠂ colon ⟨:⟩ ⠠⠄ semicolon ⟨;⟩ ⠰ ellipsis ⟨……⟩ ⠐⠐⠐
Outer Inner quotation marks 「 」 ⠰⠄⠀⠠⠆ ⠰⠢⠀⠔⠆ title quotes 《 》 ⠐⠤⠀⠤⠂ ⠐⠄⠀⠠⠂ parentheses ( ) ⠰⠤⠀⠤⠆ ⠰⠦⠀⠴⠆
square brackets 〔 〕 ⠰⠆⠀⠰⠆ dashes —— —— ⠠⠤⠀⠤⠄
References
- From Japanese Braille came the idea of an abugida-like approach to rendering syllables.
- languagehat at March 3, 2008 11:05 AM (2008-03-03). "Japanese Braille". languagehat.com. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
- 汉语双拼盲文方案
- The reverse of ⠮ ǒ, ě, which is used for yě.