(In reply to
re: solution by brianjn)
I suspect this isn't the revisitation you meant...
.
.
. In most American and British Braille systems, the pattern (1-3-5) is an o.
.
.
. With a 180° turn, the pattern becomes (2-4-6) in the Braille system and is the contraction ow or an opening bracket [.
. .
. With a 90° turn 'clockwise', the pattern may represent the v in the New York Point system where a cell is two rows instead of columns.
.
. . With a 90° turn 'counter-clockwise' the pattern may represent the y in the New York Point system.
. .
. With an approximate 45° 'counter-clockwise' turn, the three dots might be seen as the cross product symbol × in Nemeth code.
Or, with keeping the dots perpendicular with 45°, 135°, 215° and 305° 'counter-clockwise' turns, the three dots may appear as one of the following in a Braille system:
. . (1-4-5): d 4 do
. (2-5-6): . ? 4 dis
. . (1-2-4): f 6 from
. (2-3-5): ! 6 to
. (1-2-5): h 8 have
. . (2-3-6): " ? 8 his
. (2-4-5): j c 0 just/Jesus
. . (3-5-6): " : 0 was
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Posted by Dej Mar
on 2010-01-19 05:35:17 |