What is UEB Grade 2 Braille? A Complete Guide
Learn about Unified English Braille Grade 2 — the standard contracted braille system used worldwide. Understand contractions, rules, and how it differs from Grade 1.
By Braille Translator Team
Unified English Braille (UEB) Grade 2 is the standard braille code used in English-speaking countries around the world. It replaced the previous patchwork of national braille codes, creating a single unified system.
What Makes Grade 2 Different from Grade 1?
Grade 1 braille is a direct letter-by-letter transcription. Every letter of every word is spelled out individually. While simple to learn, it produces very long documents.
Grade 2 braille uses contractions — special symbols that represent common words or letter combinations. For example:
- The word “the” is represented by a single braille cell (⠮)
- “and” becomes (⠯)
- “for” becomes (⠿)
Common UEB Grade 2 Contractions
There are 189 contractions in UEB Grade 2. They fall into several categories:
- Alphabetic wordsigns: Single letters that represent whole words (e.g., “b” = “but”, “c” = “can”)
- Strong contractions: Always used regardless of position (e.g., “and”, “the”, “with”)
- Lower wordsigns: Used for common short words (e.g., “be”, “his”, “was”)
Why Use UEB Grade 2?
- Efficiency: Documents are 20-30% shorter than Grade 1
- Speed: Experienced readers can read Grade 2 much faster
- Universal: Used across all English-speaking countries since 2016
- Standard: Required for official educational materials
How Braille Translator Helps
Our braille translator fully supports UEB Grade 2, making it easy to:
- Translate braille images to text with Grade 2 contractions
- Look up specific contractions using our Contraction Lookup tool
- Convert text to Grade 2 braille notation
Whether you’re a teacher, student, parent, or accessibility professional, understanding UEB Grade 2 is essential for working with modern braille materials.