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  1. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › BrailleBraille - Wikipedia

    Braille. Un intaglio con la scritta in braille "PREMIER" viene letto da una persona che vi passa sopra le dita. Il Braille è un sistema di lettura e scrittura tattile a rilievo per non vedenti e ipovedenti, messo a punto dal francese Louis Braille nella prima metà del XIX secolo .

  2. sco.wikipedia.org › wiki › Welsh_leidWelsh leid - Wikipedia

    The Welsh leid ( Welsh: Cymraeg) is a Celtic leid frae Wales. It is pairt o the Brythonic brainch o Celtic leids. It is maist sib wi Cornish an Breton. It is aiblins spak by as mony as 20% o the indwallers o Wales. The touns and clanchans whaur maist o the fowk spiks Welsh is i the wast, and thai are cried bi some the Bro Gymraeg.

  3. American Braille was a popular braille alphabet used in the United States before the adoption of standardized English Braille in 1918. It was developed by Joel W. Smith, a blind piano tuning teacher at Perkins Institution for the Blind in Boston , and introduced in 1878 as Modified Braille .

  4. Gower dialect. The Gower dialect refers to the older vocabulary or slang of the Gower Peninsula on the south Wales coast. It was Normanised/Anglicised relatively early after the Norman conquest of England. Relatively cut off from the Welsh hinterland, but with coastal links across south Wales and the West Country, the region developed their ...

  5. Unified English Braille. Unified English Braille Code ( UEBC, formerly UBC, now usually simply UEB) is an English language Braille code standard, developed to encompass the wide variety of literary and technical material in use in the English-speaking world today, in uniform fashion.

  6. Zawód, zajęcie. organista, nauczyciel, wynalazca. Multimedia w Wikimedia Commons. Ręka czytająca słowo francuskie „premier” (pierwszy) w alfabecie Braille'a. Louis Braille (ur. 4 stycznia 1809 w Coupvray, zm. 6 stycznia 1852 w Paryżu) – francuski twórca alfabetu dla niewidomych, nazwanego później alfabetem Braille’a, organista .

  7. The first, Early Modern Welsh, ran from the early 15th century to roughly the end of the 16th century. In the Early Modern Welsh Period use of the Welsh language began to be restricted, such as with the passing of Henry VIII's 1536 Act of Union. Through this Act Wales was governed solely under English law.