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# liblouis: Sesotho/Setswana/Sepedi braille code (grade 1) #-index-name: Sesotho, uncontracted #-display-name: Sesotho uncontracted braille #-copyright: 2021, South African Braille Authority #-license: LGPLv2.1 # Copyright (C) 2021 South African Braille Authority <http://www.sabrailleauthority.org.za> # # This file is part of liblouis. # # liblouis is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it # under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as # published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2.1 of # the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # liblouis is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but # WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU # Lesser General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public # License along with liblouis. If not, see # <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. #+language: st #+type: literary #+contraction: no #+grade: 1 #+system: ubc-sotho # "UBC" stands for "Unified Braille Code" and is a generalization of UEB. # See https://sabrailleauthority.org.za/unified-braille-code-ubc. # Sesotho, Setswana and Sepedi are three of the 11 official languages # of South Africa and are mutually intelligible. Sesotho (or South # Sotho) is spoken primarily in the Free State province of South # Africa and is also an official language of Lesotho. Setswana is # widely spoken in the northern provinces of South Africa and in # Botswana. Sepedi is widely spoken in the northeastern provinces of # South Africa. # # The languages use the roman alphabet and have one diacritic letter, # š (s with caron). # # The languages all use the same braille code. It was developed over # 30 years ago and after the adoption of the UEB in South Africa, the # code was also unified according to the principles of the UEB. The # code was developed around the structure of the language, therefore # it is quite simple and does not require any complex rules. It has # around 80 contractions and achieves a high degree of contraction, # around 27%. We do not use additional codes such as Nemeth or # computer braille codes; we use our unified Sotho code also for # technical material. # This table does bidirectional translation. #+direction: both # This table is Maintained by Christo de Klerk <cjdk@mweb.co.za> #-author: Christo de Klerk <cjdk@mweb.co.za> #-maintainer: Christo de Klerk <cjdk@mweb.co.za> # Apart from the addition of the letter š the grade 1 system is # identical to UEB. # Diacritic character used in Sesotho lowercase \x0161 4-234 š base uppercase \x0160 \x0161 Šš include en-ueb-g1.ctb