ISO 15924
Qa01
Family
African
Type
alphabet
Direction
unspecified
Baseline
unspecified
Word separation
unspecified
Ligatures
none
Status
Current
Unicode
true
Diacritics
false
Contextual forms
true

Fula Dita, also called Fula A or Fula 1, was created by Oumar Dembele and used between 1958 and 1966. It is an alphabet written with thirty-one consonant letters and eight vowels. Fula Dita is one of two African scripts created for the Fula languages spoken in Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, Gambia, Chad, Sierra Leone, Benin, Guinea-Bissau, Sudan, Central African Republic, Côte dIvoire, Ghana, Togo, Liberia, and Gabon. The second of these scripts is Fula Ba. The Fula languages are more commonly written with the Latin or Arabic scripts (Ajami style) than with either of the two Fula alphabets. Of the two, Fula Dita was used more widely than Fula Ba.

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.