Pular language


Pular is a Fula language spoken primarily by the Fula people of Fouta Djallon, Guinea. It is also spoken in parts of Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, and Senegal. There are a small number of speakers in Mali. Pular is spoken by 2.5 million Guineans, about 28% of the national population. This makes Pular the most widely spoken indigenous language in the country. Substantial numbers of Pular speakers have migrated to other countries in West Africa, notably Senegal.
Pular is not to be confused with Pulaar, another Fula language spoken natively in Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, and western Mali.
Pular is written in the Ajami script and the Latin script.

Linguistic features

There are some particularities to this version of Fula, including:
Person / numberStandard long-form pronoun
Corresponding form in Pular
1st / singmiɗomiɗo
hilan
2nd / singaɗahiɗa
3rd / singomohimo
1st /pl miɗen, aminmeɗen
himen
1st / pl eɗenhiɗen
2nd / ploɗonhiɗon
3rd / pleɓehiɓe

Writing

Like other varieties of the Fula language, Pular was written before colonization in an Arabic-based orthography called "Ajami." Today, while Ajami remains prevalent in rural areas of Fouta Djallon, but Pular is mainly written in a Latin-based orthography, the so-called UNESCO orthography. Pular Latin orthography is basically the same as that used for Fula languages throughout West Africa.
Up until the mid-1980s, Pular in Guinea was written with the Guinean languages alphabet that differed from that used in other countries.

Grammar