Braille in a sentence as a noun

They would then have to read a print book and manually retype it in braille.

In 1955 a translator would have to spend a lot of time learning to read and write braille.

Maybe they have screen readers or braille devices or extra huge high contrast text.

Another earlier use of braille to draw in terms is aempirei's Chat-Art[0] project.

If their fingers are no longer sensitive enough to read braille then should they still count in the statistic?

A terrible example of relying on colour includes the braille at some Melbourne train stations[1].

Braille in a sentence as a verb

This means that with the prevalence of text to speech software it may not be worth learning braille if they already know how words are spelled and how to construct a sentence.

Besides speech output I use a device called a refreshable braille display which can display up to 40 or 80 characters at a time depending on the model being used.

It tracks the evolution of code and computing from morse code and braille on to number systems, early processors and even into how processors handle this information.

By the time I started school anyone with basic computer literacy could scan in a book, open the file in a translation program and print a braille copy out using a braille embosser.

Let me share with you my scenario: I have spent 5 years and a considerable amount of my yearly income developing a product I think can honestly revolutionize the electronic braille reader industry for the blind.

Braille definitions

noun

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)

See also: Braille

noun

a point system of writing in which patterns of raised dots represent letters and numerals

verb

transcribe in braille