script: Qa23
family: Southeast Asian
type: alphabet
whitespace: discretionary
open_type_tag: none
complex_positioning: unknown
unicode: true
diacritics: true
status: Current
baseline: hanging
ligatures: required
direction: ltr

The Zou script is used by speakers of the Zomi language (also called Zo or Zou) in the adjoining regions of Chin State, Myanmar and Manipur, India. Zomi is a Tibeto-Burman language with about 50,000 speakers. The script was developed by M. Siahzathang, a Manipuri, in 1952. The official script for the Zomi language is Latin.

The Zou script is written from left to right. It is unusual amongst South- and East Asian scripts in that it possesses upper and lower case. The script combines features of an alphabet and features of an abugida.

The Zou script has been in decline since the mid-1970s but the Zou Literature Society has been trying to revive it since the 1990s.

This script is not currently recognized by the  ISO 15924 standard, but is included in ScriptSource for research purposes. If you have any information on this script, please add the information to this site. Your contributions can be a great help in refining and expanding the ISO 15924 standard. The  Script Encoding Initiative is working to support the inclusion of this script in the standard, and contributions here will support their efforts.