U+281C, ⠜
BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-345

[U+281B]
Braille Patterns
[U+281D]

Translingual

A character of the braille script, originally used to transcribe the letter æ.

Etymology

Letter

  1. (German Braille, Swedish Braille, Finnish Braille, Estonian Braille) ä
  2. (Danish Braille, Icelandic Braille) æ
  3. (Vietnamese Braille) ă
  4. (Czech Braille) é
  5. (Lithuanian Braille) ė
  6. (Hungarian Braille) A letter rendering the print digraph zs
  7. (Latvian Braille) z
  8. (IPA Braille) ɛ
Non-Latin transliteration
  1. (International Greek Braille) ά (á)
  2. (Greek Braille) η (ê) [see also ]
  3. (Yugoslav Braille) ѓ (gj) [Macedonian]
  4. (Ukrainian Braille) є (ie)
  5. (Arabic Braille) آ (ʾā)
  6. (Bharati Braille) and ◌ा (ā)
  7. (Tibetan Braille) (nya)
  8. (Thai Braille) The vowel ◌ั (medial short a)
  9. (Cantonese Braille) The rime aam

Punctuation mark

  1. (Spanish Braille))

See also

English

Letter

(ar)

  1. Renders the print sequence ar.

Usage notes

  • This is used for any sequence of the letters ar within a word, as in around.

Punctuation mark

(|)

  1. the pipe |

French

Symbol

(ä)

  1. ä or æ (in foreign words)

Symbol

  1. The at sign, @.
  2. Used to mark the end of a verse.
  3. (archaic, in the context of the number sign ) the square-root sign .

Contraction

  1. The independent word les.
  2. The letter sequence gl [+V].
  3. The letter sequence em [+C].

Usage notes

  • The sequences gl and em may appear anywhere in their word, as long as they are followed by a vowel or consonant, respectively.

Japanese

Syllable

(romaji yo)

  1. The hiragana syllable (yo) or the katakana syllable (yo) in Japanese braille.

Korean

Etymology

  • A reversed (a).

Letter

• (ya)

  1. The vowel (ya)

Derived terms

Mandarin

Letter

  1. (Mainland Braille) The rime yao/-iao
  2. (Taiwan Braille) The rime a
  3. (Two-Cell Braille) The onset di- or the rime -ēi