Hawaiian Braille is the braille alphabet of the Hawaiian language.
It is a subset of the basic braille alphabet, supplemented by an additional letter ⠸ to mark long vowels: (Māori Braille uses the same convention for long vowels.
)[1] Unlike print Hawaiian, which has a special letter ʻokina for the glottal stop, Hawaiian Braille uses the apostrophe ⠄, which behaves as punctuation rather than as a consonant: That is, the order to write ʻĀ is apostrophe, cap sign, length sign, A. Punctuation is as in English Braille.