Serer today is primarily written in Latin alphabet. The Latin alphabet has been standardized in various government decrees, the latest of which was issued in 2005. However, historically, similar to
Wolof language, its first writing system was the adaption of the Arabic Script. The Arabic script is used today as well, albeit in a smaller scale, and only mostly limited to Islamic school teachers and students. The
Arabic-based script of Serer was set by the government as well, between 1985 and 1990, although never adopted by a decree, as the effort by the Senegalese ministry of education was to be part of a multi-national standardization effort. The script is referred to as "Serer
Ajami script" (In Serer:
ajami seereer, ).
Serer Latin alphabet Serer Ajami script There are 29 letters in Serer Ajami script. The list does not include consonants that are used exclusively in Arabic loanwords and do not occur in Serer words, nor does it include digraphs used for showing prenasalized consonants.
Prenasalized consonants are written as a
digraph (combination of two consonants). While historically, there were single letter alternatives, these letters are no longer used. Prenasalized consonants are constructed using
meem (م) or
noon (ن) in combination with other consonants. The letter
meem (م) appears in pairs with
beh (ب), whereas the letter
noon (ن) appears in pairs with
dal (د),
jeem (ج),
qaf (ق), and
geh (گ). Prenasalized consonants cannot take the zero-vowel diacritic
sukun (◌ْ). If they are at the end of the word and have no vowels, they will take the gemination diacritic
shadda (◌ّ). In prenasalized consonants, the first letter of the digraph, namely either
meem (م) or
noon (ن), is written with no diacritic. This is what distinguishes them from consonant sequences. Some Serer-speaking authors treat these digraphs as their own independent letters. Serer Ajami script, like its parent system, the
Arabic script, and like other
Ajami scripts, is an
abjad. This means that only consonants are represented with letters. Vowels are shown with
diacritics. As a matter of fact, writing of diacritics, including
zero-vowel (sukun) diacritic as per the orthographic are mandatory. Arabic has 3 vowels, and thus 3 vowel diacritics. But in Serer, there are 5 vowels, and as all vowels are shown with diacritics in Serer. This means that on top of the 3 original diacritics, 2 additional ones have been created. Vowels in Wolof are also distinguished by length, short and long. Short vowels are only shown with a diacritic. Similar to Arabic, long vowels are indicated by writing
alif (ا),
waw (و), or
yeh (ي). But unlike Arabic, this does not mean that the vowel diacritic can be dropped. It cannot, as there 5 vowels and not 3. • For vowel "a" (◌َ), the vowel is lengthened (aa) with an
alif (ا) • For vowels "e" or "i", the vowel is lengthened (ee, ii) with a
yeh (ي). • For vowels "o" or "u", the vowel is lengthened (oo, uu) with a
waw (و). When vowels appear at the beginning of the word, an
alif (ا) is used as the carrier of the vowel. If a long vowel is at the beginning of the word, an
alif, an
alif (ا) is used as the carrier of the vowel, followed by either
waw (و) or
yeh (ي) as appropriate. The exception is when a word starts with the long vowel "Aa". Instead of two
alifs (اا) being used, an
alif-maddah (آ) is used. ==Greetings==