The first three letters are D N T, but the last two don’t appear to be valid characters. Caveat, I’m just using online references, I don’t actually know Braille.
No problem! The extra fun part is that ch can also be the abbreviation for child, although the spacing and context obviously settles that ambiguity. So, you could maybe read this as “do not toutchild” if you wanted to be silly.
The first three letters are D N T, but the last two don’t appear to be valid characters. Caveat, I’m just using online references, I don’t actually know Braille.
It’s valid contracted Braille. The last two characters are out/ou and ch.
I didn’t know contracted Braille was a thing. See? I said I didn’t really know Braille. Thanks for teaching me something!
No problem! The extra fun part is that ch can also be the abbreviation for child, although the spacing and context obviously settles that ambiguity. So, you could maybe read this as “do not toutchild” if you wanted to be silly.