I'm sorry, but I don't recall CBFB. What does that stand for, please, and do you think they still have it?
Someone just recommended a product at Enable.mart, which I tried to check out , but found very little info on the site about the product. The price was $42 something, which isn't bad at all, but I wouldn't pay that kind of money only knowing that it offered the use of the defined word in a sentence . There wasn't even a statement about how many words were defined. Again, I really want something that shows parts of speech, syllabification, etimology, usage notes, all the things you expect to find in a good, printed dictionary. I remember when I was a kid at Perkins, there were braille dictionaries in the study halls which had 32 or 33 volumes, showing all of those things; they exist somewhere, and in this electronic age I would expect it should be possible to scan such braille pages to recreat the files for those volumes and get them back in circulation. Louis Gosselin -----Original Message----- From: Grant Metcalf [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2017 11:21 AM To: gosselin_louis <[email protected]>; Window-Eyes Discussion List <[email protected]> Subject: Re: Looking for Accessible Dictionary CBFB years ago produced the American Heritage Dictionary in computerized format. I have found it very useful. y _______________________________________________ Any views or opinions presented in this email are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Ai Squared. For membership options, visit http://lists.window-eyes.com/options.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com/archive%40mail-archive.com. For subscription options, visit http://lists.window-eyes.com/listinfo.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com List archives can be found at http://lists.window-eyes.com/private.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com
