With the exception of w, Czech follows international norms for the basic letters of the alphabet.
a, 1 |
á |
b, 2 |
c, 3 |
č |
d, 4 |
ď |
e, 5 |
é |
ě |
f, 6 |
g, 7 |
h, 8 |
i, 9 |
í |
j, 0 |
k |
l |
m |
n |
ň |
o |
ó |
p, % |
q |
r, ‰ |
ř |
s |
š |
t |
ť |
u |
ú, § |
ů |
v |
w |
x |
y |
ý |
z |
ž |
|
. |
, |
: |
; |
- or − |
+ |
/ |
? |
! |
" |
( |
) |
* |
’ |
| |
(Cap) |
(CAPS) |
(l.c.) |
For letters with diacritics, there are two common strategies: (1) a dot 6 may be added (á, č, ď), or (2) the letter is reversed (ň, ó, ř, š, ť, ú, ý, ž). The Czech braille letter ř is the international form for w, so w has been assigned an idiosyncratic form, which is the reverse of ů. Í is a stretched i. É and ě are not derived from e, but are the reverse of each other.
The numerical prefix, ⠼, derives the second options in the table (the digits, %, ‰, §). ⠠ indicates a capital letter, ⠰ that a word is in all caps, and ⠐ indicates lower case. There are also prefixes for small and capital Greek letters, ⠘ and ⠨.