Fula language
Fula, also known as Fulfulde, Pulaar, or Pular, is a Northern Senegambian language belonging to the Atlantic branch of the Niger-Congo family, spoken primarily by the Fulani (or Fulbe) people as their first language.[1] It forms a dialect continuum characterized by significant regional variation, with major varieties including Pulaar in Senegal and Guinea, Pular in Guinea, and Fulfulde in Mali, Nigeria, and Cameroon.[2] The language is distributed across approximately 20 countries in West, Central, and parts of East Africa, stretching from Senegal and Mauritania in the west to Sudan and South Sudan in the east, making it one of Africa's most geographically widespread languages.[1][2] It has an estimated 35 million native speakers as of 2021, primarily among the Fulani pastoralists and farmers, though it also serves as a lingua franca in some Sahelian regions.[3] Estimates of total speakers, including second-language users, reach around 40 million as of 2025.[4] Linguistically, Fula is notable for its complex noun class system, which involves over 20 classes marked by suffixes on nouns and agreement in verbs, adjectives, and pronouns, reflecting a highly agglutinative morphology.[1] The phonology includes five vowel qualities with length distinctions, no tone, and 28 consonants, including implosives and glottalized stops; basic word order is subject-verb-object (SVO).[1] The verbal system is intricate, featuring aspects like perfective and imperfective, three voices (active, middle, passive), and numerous derivational extensions for actions such as causative or reciprocal.[1] Historically an oral language tied to the nomadic Fulani culture, Fula has been written using the Ajami script (an Arabic-based adaptation) since at least the 18th century for religious and literary purposes, particularly in Islamic scholarship.[5] In modern times, the Latin alphabet is predominant for education and media, with efforts to standardize orthographies across dialects; additionally, the Adlam script, invented in the 1980s by Fulani scholars, is gaining use for digital and cultural preservation. Despite its vitality in rural and pastoral communities, Fula faces challenges from dominant national languages like French, English, or Hausa in urban and educational settings.[2]Classification and nomenclature
Linguistic classification
Fula (also known as Fulfulde or Pulaar) is classified as a member of the Senegambian subgroup within the Northern Atlantic branch of the Niger-Congo language family, where it forms part of the closely related Fula-Serer-Wolof subgroup (also known as Senegambian languages) alongside Wolof and Serer.[6] This placement reflects shared typological features, such as complex noun class systems marked by suffixes in Fula, which align it genetically with other Atlantic languages through innovations like class-dependent agreement and lexical reconstructions traceable to a proto-Atlantic stage.[7] The Atlantic branch itself is recognized as a coherent areal and genetic unit within Niger-Congo, distinguished by traits including consonant mutation and prefixed or suffixed nominal morphology, though internal diversity has prompted hypotheses about possible isolates or subgroups.[8] Historically, Fula's classification evolved from early 20th-century work by Diedrich Westermann, who grouped it in the West Atlantic languages based on phonological and morphological parallels with Wolof and Serer, such as initial consonant changes and noun class concord.[9] Joseph Greenberg later integrated these into his broader Niger-Congo phylum in the 1940s and 1960s, emphasizing lexical and grammatical resemblances like the noun class system as evidence of deeper affiliation, while reclassifying former "Western Sudanic" languages. Debates persist regarding Atlantic's exact position within Niger-Congo, with some scholars questioning the robustness of shared innovations beyond noun classes and proposing alternative subgroupings, such as linking Fula more closely to Serer than to Wolof based on reconstructed proto-forms.[8] These genetic ties underscore Fula's vitality, evidenced by its approximately 35–40 million speakers, primarily first-language users among the Fulani, with totals up to 65 million including second-language speakers (recent estimates).[3] The language's expansive speaker base highlights its role as a major Atlantic tongue, sustained by pastoralist migrations that parallel the spread of related Niger-Congo varieties.[10]Names and etymology
The language is known by various endonyms and exonyms reflecting its dialect continuum and regional usage. Primary endonyms include Fulfulde (used in central and eastern varieties, such as in Nigeria and Cameroon), Pulaar (in western dialects spoken in Senegal, Mauritania, and western Guinea), and Pular (in Guinea and northern Sierra Leone). These names derive from the ethnic self-designation of the Fulbe (or Fulani) people: for example, Fulfulde is formed from Fulɓe (plural of Pulɓe, "Fulbe") + -nde ("language"), literally "language of the Fulbe"; similarly, Pulaar combines Pulɓe + -ar (a suffix indicating language).[2] Exonyms include Fula or Fulah (English and general academic usage, derived from a shortened form of the ethnic name), Fulani (common in Hausa-speaking regions and English, influenced by Hausa Fulani), and Peul (French colonial term, from Wolof Peul). The term "Fulani" sometimes refers specifically to Nigerian varieties, while "Fula" is broader. Historically, the nomenclature reflects interactions with neighboring languages and colonial influences, with "Ajami" literature using Arabic script often employing these names in Islamic contexts. Regional variations in naming underscore the dialect continuum, with no single standardized endonym across all speakers.[1]Distribution and status
Geographic distribution
The Fula language, known variably as Fulfulde, Pulaar, or Pular depending on the region, exhibits a broad trans-Saharan continuum spanning West and Central Africa. Its core regions include Senegal, Guinea, Mali, and Nigeria in West Africa, extending eastward to Cameroon and Chad in Central Africa, with outlier communities in Sudan and parts of East Africa such as Kenya and Ethiopia. This vast distribution covers approximately 20 countries, reflecting the migratory patterns of its speakers over centuries.[11][10][12][13] The geographic spread of Fula is intrinsically linked to the historical migrations of the Fulani (also called Fulɓe or Peul) pastoralists, who trace their origins to the Senegambia region near the Senegal River valley. By the 14th century, these groups had migrated southward into the Fouta Djallon highlands of present-day Guinea, establishing a base from which they expanded as cattle herders across the Sahel and savanna belts, driven by the search for grazing lands and influenced by Islamic jihads in the 18th and 19th centuries. This nomadic lifestyle facilitated the language's dissemination along trade routes and pastoral corridors, creating a dialect continuum rather than isolated pockets.[14][15][16] Dialect boundaries within this continuum are often subtle and gradual, shaped by geographic features; for instance, the Senegal River valley serves as a transitional zone, with the Pulaar dialect predominant north and west of the river in areas like Fuuta Tooro (spanning Senegal and Mauritania), while Fulfulde varieties emerge to the south and east, such as in the Fouta Djallon region. Further east, additional divides occur along ecological zones, like the transition from savanna to more arid Sahelian areas in Mali and Niger.[12][17][18] Fula usage patterns differ between rural and urban settings, with the language most robustly maintained in rural pastoral communities where nomadic herding persists, but also present among settled Fulani populations in urban centers like Dakar, Bamako, and Kano. As of 2025, diaspora communities have extended its reach beyond Africa, with speakers establishing groups in European countries such as France and the United Kingdom, as well as in North America, particularly the United States and Canada, often through labor migration and refugee movements.[19][20][21][22]Speaker demographics
The Fula language, also known as Fulfulde or Pulaar, is spoken by approximately 40 million people across West and Central Africa as of 2025.[13] This figure encompasses both native and second-language users, with estimates indicating 25 to 30 million L1 speakers who acquire the language from birth within Fulani communities, and 10 to 15 million L2 speakers who adopt it for trade, interethnic communication, or cultural integration.[12][23] In terms of geographic breakdown, Nigeria hosts the largest population of Fula speakers, with around 16.3 million native speakers reported in recent linguistic surveys.[12] Guinea follows with approximately 5.7 million speakers, representing about 38.6% of the national population according to 2023 demographic data derived from the 2014 census adjusted for population growth.[12][24] Other significant concentrations include Senegal (around 3.7 million, or 20.7% of the population), Mali, Niger, and Cameroon, where speakers number in the millions each, often tied to Fulani pastoral migrations.[12] Demographic profiles reveal a relatively balanced gender distribution among Fula speakers, mirroring the Fulani ethnic group's sex ratio of nearly 100 males per 100.2 females in surveyed West African populations.[25] Age-wise, the speaker base skews toward younger demographics in rural areas, with higher proficiency and daily usage concentrated among pastoralist communities where the language supports traditional herding and social structures; urban youth show variable retention rates.[26][27] The language's speaker numbers have shown steady growth over the past decade, driven by high birth rates in Fulani populations (estimated at 35-45 million ethnic members globally), though transmission faces challenges from urbanization.[28] As pastoralists increasingly sedentarize in cities like Kano in Nigeria or Conakry in Guinea, younger generations experience disrupted intergenerational learning, leading to shifts toward dominant national languages like Hausa or French in urban settings.[29] This trend underscores a gradual adaptation rather than decline, with L2 adoption rising in multicultural trade hubs.[30]Sociolinguistic status
The Fula language holds official national status in Guinea, where it is one of six indigenous languages recognized alongside French, serving as a key medium for local administration and education in Fulani-majority regions.[24] In Senegal, Fula (known locally as Pulaar) is designated a national language under the constitution, promoting its use in cultural and educational contexts despite French's dominance in formal institutions.[31] In Sierra Leone, Fula is spoken as a minority language, functioning as a lingua franca among Fulani communities and in cross-ethnic communication, though English remains the sole official language for government. In Nigeria and Mali, it has regional official recognition, particularly in northern areas where it supports local governance and is used in broadcasting and primary schooling.[12] In post-colonial West Africa, Fula often exists in diglossic relationships with colonial languages, where French serves as the high variety for official and educational domains in Francophone countries like Guinea, Senegal, and Mali, while Fula functions as the low variety for everyday and informal interactions.[32] In Anglophone regions such as Sierra Leone and Nigeria, English occupies the high register, relegating Fula to home and community use, though Arabic influences persist in Islamic religious contexts among Fulani Muslims, creating layered multilingualism.[33] This diglossia reflects historical colonial legacies, limiting Fula's institutional expansion but reinforcing its vitality in oral domains. Fula plays a central role in Fulani ethnic identity, embodying cultural heritage through rich oral traditions such as praise poetry (makko), which celebrates pastoral life, genealogy, and social values during ceremonies and migrations.[34] These traditions, transmitted intergenerationally, preserve historical narratives and reinforce community bonds, with poets (griots) using rhythmic verse to honor leaders and events.[35] In modern media, Fula thrives on radio broadcasts like Voice of America's "Fula Voices" program, launched in 2024, which combines audio content with digital platforms for news and cultural discussions targeting youth.[36] Emerging digital apps, including language learning tools and streaming services, further extend its reach, adapting oral forms to podcasts and social media by 2025.[37] The language's vitality is assessed at EGIDS level 2-3, indicating institutional and widespread use with stable intergenerational transmission, though urban migration poses minor endangerment risks as younger speakers shift toward dominant languages in cities.[38]Varieties and standardization
Dialect continuum
The Fula language, known variably as Fulfulde, Pulaar, or Pular depending on the region, constitutes a dialect continuum that extends across the Sahel and Savannah zones of West and Central Africa, from Senegal in the west to Sudan in the east. This vast linguistic chain, spanning approximately 5,000 kilometers, features gradual shifts in vocabulary, phonology, and grammar as one moves eastward, with neighboring dialects exhibiting high mutual intelligibility while distant ones show reduced comprehension. The continuum reflects the nomadic pastoralist lifestyle of its speakers, the Fulani (or Fulbe) people, allowing for a fluid rather than discrete division of varieties.[2][1] Under the ISO 639-3 standard, Fula is classified as a macrolanguage with the code "ful," encompassing multiple closely related lects; for instance, the western Pulaar variety receives the code "fuc," while central and eastern Fulfulde forms, such as Pular, are assigned "fuf." This coding acknowledges the interconnected nature of the dialects without imposing rigid boundaries, as the language's unity is maintained through shared grammatical structures and core lexicon despite regional adaptations.[39] Key factors driving variation in the continuum include geographic separation across diverse ecological zones, the extensive historical migrations of Fulani clans over centuries, and sustained contact with substrate and adstrate languages. In western and central regions, prolonged interaction with Hausa has introduced loanwords and influenced syntax, particularly in areas like northern Nigeria and Niger. Further east, exposure to local languages in Cameroon and Sudan has similarly shaped lexical borrowing, contributing to the progressive divergence observed along the chain.[2][40][41] Western varieties, such as those in Senegal and Guinea, diverge notably from eastern forms in Cameroon and Sudan, with lexical similarities between them often falling below levels supporting full mutual intelligibility, estimated in some studies at around 80% for closer subgroups but lower for extremes of the continuum. This divergence underscores the dynamic evolution of Fula as a chain rather than isolated dialects, where transitions are smooth within local clusters but accumulate over long distances. Major named varieties like Pulaar in the west and Adamawa Fulfulde in the east exemplify this structure without breaking the overall continuity.[26][2]Major varieties
The Fula language encompasses a dialect continuum with three primary regional varieties: Western, Central, and Eastern, each exhibiting distinct phonological, morphological, and lexical features shaped by geographic and cultural contacts. These varieties are mutually intelligible to varying degrees, with differences increasing from west to east.[42] The Western variety, known as Pulaar, is primarily spoken in Senegal, Mauritania, and parts of Mali and Guinea, with an estimated 4.5 million speakers across these regions. This variety maintains a conservative phonology, preserving older sound patterns such as implosive consonants and vowel qualities with minimal simplification compared to eastern forms, and it serves as a key language in media, broadcasting, and education in Senegal. Sub-varieties include Fuuta Toro Pulaar in the Senegal River Valley and Fuuta Jalon Pular in Guinea, the latter with approximately 5 million speakers.[23][18][43][42] The Central variety, referred to as Fulfulde, predominates in Nigeria, Ghana, Niger, and central Mali, boasting over 15 million speakers in Nigeria alone where it functions as a lingua franca among Fulani communities. Characterized by innovative verb forms that incorporate extensive aspectual and modal extensions influenced by prolonged contact with Hausa, this variety features complex verbal derivations and lexical borrowings from Hausa in domains like trade and administration. Notable sub-varieties include Sokoto Fulfulde in northwestern Nigeria and Maasina Fulfulde in Mali, with the former spoken by several million in the Sokoto Caliphate region.[44][41][42] The Eastern variety, Adamawa Fulfulde, extends across Cameroon, Sudan, Chad, and eastern Nigeria, with approximately 2 million speakers who use it in pastoral and agricultural contexts. It displays vowel reductions, where long vowels shorten in unstressed positions and some diphthongs simplify due to areal influences, alongside lexical and structural contacts with Bantu languages in southern Cameroon and the Central African Republic. Sub-varieties such as Bagirmi Fulfulde in Chad and the Central African Republic have around 250,000 speakers and show further adaptations from local Chadic and Nilotic neighbors.[45][46][47][42]Standardization efforts
Standardization efforts for the Fula language have primarily focused on developing consistent orthographies to bridge its dialect continuum, beginning with regional initiatives in the mid-20th century. In 1966, a UNESCO-sponsored conference in Bamako, Mali, established a Latin-based orthography for several West African languages, including Fula, which was adopted in Guinea for the Pular variety. This standard incorporated specific characters such as Ɓ ɓ, Ɗ ɗ, and Ɠ ɠ to represent implosive consonants unique to Fula phonology, facilitating literacy in educational and administrative contexts.[48][49] In Nigeria, orthographic reforms in the late 1970s built on this foundation through the Niamey conference of 1978, another UNESCO initiative aimed at harmonizing African language scripts. The conference proposed the African Reference Alphabet, which influenced the standardization of Fulfulde orthography in northern Nigeria, adapting elements like prenasalized consonants (e.g., mb, nd) while accommodating local variations such as ñ for /ɲ/. These regional standards, while promoting literacy within countries, highlighted the need for broader unification due to Fula's transborder spread.[50][49] Pan-Fula efforts have gained momentum through institutional research and innovative scripts. In Senegal, the Laboratoire Linguistique at the Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire (IFAN) has contributed to documenting and standardizing Pulaar, supporting cross-dialectal studies and literacy materials. The Adlam script, invented in the 1980s by brothers Ibrahima and Abdoulaye Barry in Guinea, plays a key role in unification by providing a neutral, phonetically precise writing system independent of colonial Latin or Arabic influences, now digitized for mobile keyboards and texts across Fulani communities. In the 2020s, digital corpora and NLP tools, such as those explored in African low-resource language projects, have emerged to analyze Fula varieties and aid machine translation, enhancing accessibility. In 2024, Google Translate added support for Fulani, improving digital accessibility. A 2025 study proposed a set of morphosyntactic labels for the Adamawa dialect to support NLP development.[51][52][53][54][55] Challenges to standardization persist, including dialectal prestige where Pulaar is often viewed as the "pure" or reference variety in Senegal and Guinea, potentially marginalizing eastern dialects like those in Nigeria or Cameroon. This linguistic hierarchy complicates pan-Fula codification, as speakers may resist forms diverging from local norms. Additionally, varying script preferences—Latin in formal education versus Adlam in cultural revitalization—underscore tensions between tradition and practicality.[56] Recent developments include UNESCO's support for cross-border literacy under the International Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022-2032), which funds projects promoting Fula in West Africa through multilingual education and digital resources, aiming to foster unity amid diversity by 2032.[57]Phonology
Consonants
The Fula language, also known as Fulfulde or Pulaar, features a consonant inventory typically comprising 27 to 28 phonemes across its varieties, characterized by a mix of pulmonic stops, implosive stops, fricatives, nasals, liquids, and glides. These consonants are articulated at various places including bilabial, labiodental, alveolar, palatal, velar, labiovelar, and glottal positions, with manners of articulation encompassing plosives (voiceless and voiced), implosives, nasals, fricatives (voiceless and voiced in some dialects), approximants, and a trill. The inventory reflects the language's Atlantic Niger-Congo affiliation, with notable features like implosives distinguishing it from many related languages. Dialectal variation affects the presence of certain sounds, such as voiced fricatives /v/ and /z/ in some varieties (e.g., more common in eastern Fulfulde) and the velar implosive /ɠ/ primarily in Pular of Guinea.[58] Implosive consonants, such as /ɓ/, /ɗ/, and /ɠ/, are ingressive sounds produced with a lowering of the glottis, common in West African languages and phonemic in Fula to contrast with plain stops. Fricatives are limited, primarily /f/, /s/, and /h/, though voiced counterparts like /v/ and /z/ appear in some varieties or as allophones. Nasals occur at bilabial (/m/), alveolar (/n/), and velar (/ŋ/) places, while liquids include the alveolar lateral /l/ and trill /r/. Glides /w/ and /j/ function both as consonants and semi-vowels. In certain dialects, labiovelar stops /kp/ and /gb/ are included, and rare labialized velars like /ɡʷ/ may occur marginally.[59] Allophonic variations include labialization of velar consonants (e.g., /k/ realized as [kʷ] before rounded vowels) and pre-nasalization, where stops like /b/ and /d/ surface as [ᵐb] and [ⁿd] before nasal vowels or in prenasalized contexts, though these may be phonemic in some analyses. Prenasalized clusters such as mb and nd are distinct from simple nasals followed by stops in Fula, contributing to its complex consonant system. Initial consonant mutation, a morphological process, can alter these realizations (e.g., /p/ to /f/), but the core phonemic inventory remains stable.[49][60] The following table presents a representative consonant chart for central varieties of Fula, using IPA symbols alongside standard orthographic equivalents (based on the 1966 Bamako standardization). Note that orthography varies slightly by region, with some dialects using additional diacritics for implosives.| Bilabial | Labiodental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Labiovelar | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plosive (voiceless) | p (p) | t (t) | t͡ʃ (c) | k (k) | k͡p (kp) | ||
| Plosive (voiced) | b (b) | d (d) | d͡ʒ (j) | g (g) | g͡b (gb) | ||
| Implosive | ɓ (ɓ) | ɗ (ɗ) | ɠ (ŋ́ or ɠ) | ||||
| Nasal | m (m) | n (n) | ɲ (ny) | ŋ (ŋ or ng) | |||
| Fricative (voiceless) | f (f) | s (s) | h (h) | ||||
| Fricative (voiced) | v (v, some dialects) | z (z, some dialects) | |||||
| Lateral approximant | l (l) | ||||||
| Trill | r (r) | ||||||
| Approximant | j (y) | w (w) |
Vowels
The Fula language (also known as Fulfulde or Pulaar in various dialects) possesses a vowel system consisting of seven oral vowels distinguished by height, backness, and advanced tongue root (ATR) features, alongside five nasal vowels. This system is typical of many West Atlantic languages within the Niger-Congo family, where ATR harmony plays a key role in vowel co-occurrence within words. Dialects may vary slightly in realizations, but the core seven-vowel system is widespread.[62][63] The oral vowels are /i/ (close front unrounded [+ATR]), /u/ (close back rounded [+ATR]), /e/ (close-mid front unrounded [+ATR]), /o/ (close-mid back rounded [+ATR]), /ɛ/ (open-mid front unrounded [-ATR]), /ɔ/ (open-mid back rounded [-ATR]), and /a/ (open central unrounded [-ATR]). ATR harmony requires vowels in a word to agree in tongue root advancement, with [+ATR] vowels (/i, e, o, u/) typically triggering harmony on non-low vowels, while /a/ is opaque. For instance, in the Pulaar dialect, roots containing a [+ATR] vowel like /i/ or /u/ cause suffixes to surface with [+ATR] variants (e.g., /e/ rather than /ɛ/).[62][63][64] Vowel length is phonemic, contrasting short and long variants in lexical roots and affecting meaning; long vowels are often realized as bimoraic and marked orthographically by doubling (e.g., /a/ vs. /aː/). Examples include the short vowel in mbàddo ('cow', with /a/) versus longer forms in derived words like baɗɗe ('to be red', with lengthened /aː/ in some realizations).[65][66] Nasal vowels, numbering five (/ĩ/, /ẽ/, /ã/, /õ/, /ũ/), arise primarily in environments adjacent to nasal consonants but can be contrastive in certain dialects, participating in ATR harmony similarly to oral vowels. They are less frequent in root vowels but appear in suffixes or through nasal spreading. For example, nasalization may affect /a/ to yield /ã/ in words like ɓàaɗũm ('nomadism', with nasal /ũ/).[67] The following table illustrates the oral vowel inventory, with approximate ATR specifications:| Height | Front unrounded | Central unrounded | Back rounded |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i [+ATR] | u [+ATR] | |
| Close-mid | e [+ATR] | o [+ATR] | |
| Open-mid | ɛ [-ATR] | ɔ [-ATR] | |
| Open | a [-ATR] |
Phonological processes
The Fula language, also known as Fulfulde or Pulaar, features advanced tongue root (ATR) vowel harmony as a key phonological process, where the [+ATR] or [-ATR] feature of the rightmost vowel in a morphological domain spreads regressively to preceding mid vowels within the word. This harmony primarily affects the mid vowels /e, o/ (advanced) and /ɛ, ɔ/ (non-advanced), while high vowels /i, u/ are inherently [+ATR] and the low vowel /a/ is opaque, blocking the spread. For instance, in the Fuuta Tooro dialect of Pulaar, the verb stem gudde ('to buy', with [-ATR] mid vowel) conditions a [-ATR] realization of the 3rd person singular suffix -ee as guddɛ, whereas stems with [+ATR] mid vowels trigger [+ATR] suffixes, as in sǒkkǒ 'lock' + diminutive -o → sǒkkǒo. Low vowels prevent harmony from crossing them, as seen in forms where /a/ intervenes between [+ATR] elements.[64][68] In addition to ATR harmony, Fula exhibits nasal vowel harmony, whereby nasality from a root nasal vowel spreads progressively or regressively across the word to all vowels, often across coronal consonants but blocked by obstruents. The language has a seven-vowel oral inventory (/i, e, ɛ, a, ɔ, o, u/) paralleled by nasal vowels (/ĩ, ẽ, ã, õ, ũ/), and harmony ensures that affixes agree in nasality with the root; for example, a nasal root like mbaaki ('burial') nasalizes the entire form, including suffixes, as mbãakĩ. This spreading operates within the word domain, unifying the nasal quality and contributing to the suprasegmental cohesion of lexical items. Nasal harmony interacts with ATR, as nasal vowels may influence tongue root position, but it primarily targets the [nasal] feature.[69][70] Fula's syllable structure adheres to a CV(C) template, with obligatory onsets (consonants or glides) and codas restricted to sonorants, particularly nasals (/m, n, ŋ/) and liquids (/l, r/), prohibiting obstruent codas to maintain sonority constraints. Permitted syllable types include light CV and heavy CVV or CVVC, where long vowels or coda+sonorant combinations add weight; vowel-initial syllables are avoided through prothetic glides or resyllabification. For example, underlying /a.uɗo/ ('to sit') surfaces as [w.uɗo] with a glide onset, and codas like /n/ in ban ('they') are sonorant-only. This structure supports complex onsets in some varieties but enforces strict coda limitations, influencing reduplication and compounding. Variation exists across dialects, with some allowing broader coda possibilities.[71][72] Unlike many Niger-Congo languages, Fula lacks lexical tone, relying instead on stress for prosodic prominence, which is assigned to the leftmost heavy syllable (CVV or CVVC) in a word; if no heavy syllables are present, stress defaults to the initial syllable. This metrical system, analyzed in terms of sonority hierarchies, distinguishes four weight levels (CV < CVC < CVV < CVVC), with primary stress attracting greater intensity and duration. For instance, in bataata ('onions'), the heavy final syllable receives stress as [ba.taa.tà], while all-light words like ɗumma ('respect') stress the initial syllable [ɗùm.ma]. Secondary stresses may emerge in longer forms, but the system avoids clash through lapse resolution.[73][74] In connected speech, especially in rapid or casual varieties, Fula undergoes elision and contraction to resolve hiatus at word boundaries, such as the deletion of a high vowel adjacent to another vowel, facilitating smoother articulation. For example, in the sequence mi a ('I and'), the initial /a/ of the second word may elide to [mja] in fast speech across dialects like Nigerian Fulfulde, or vowels contract in pronominal clitics, as ne + e → [nɛ] ('he it'). These processes are more prevalent in eastern varieties and contribute to dialectal variation, though they do not alter core lexical forms.[75][76]Morphology
Noun classes
The Fula language, also known as Fulfulde, exhibits a highly developed noun class system characteristic of the Atlantic branch of Niger-Congo languages, comprising over 20 classes that typically pair singular and plural forms through distinctive prefixes. These prefixes not only categorize nouns but also govern grammatical agreement across the sentence, ensuring concord in gender, number, and class on modifiers and verbs. The system integrates approximately 21 to 26 classes depending on the dialect, with more singular classes than plurals, allowing for flexible pairings that reflect both formal and semantic distinctions.[77][7] Semantically, the classes are motivated by categories such as humans, animals, liquids, trees and large objects, as well as derivational notions like diminutives and augmentatives, though assignment can vary by dialect and historical factors. For instance, the human class uses the singular prefix o- (or zero in some forms) and plural ɓe-, as in o neɗɗo ('person') and ɓe neɗɗe ('people'). Liquids and certain abstracts often employ ndiy- in the singular and am- or dialect-specific in the plural, exemplified by ndiyam ('water') and ɓam ɗiyam ('waters' or collections of liquid). Animal classes often pair nge- (singular) with ngu- or ɗum- (plural), such as naggel ('cow') and ngu naggel ('cows'). Diminutives typically use ngel- for singular and ɓa- or wo- for plural, while augmentatives may involve ko- or ngo-. These semantic groupings facilitate nuanced expression, with classes like nge- dedicated to cattle terms, underscoring cultural significance. The exact number and pairings vary by dialect, with eastern Fulfulde often having more classes (up to 26) than western Pulaar (around 22).[78][79][10] Agreement patterns require that adjectives, demonstratives, possessive pronouns, and verbs in certain constructions adopt the prefix of the governing noun class, creating cohesive nominal expressions. For example, the phrase "the big cow" is rendered as naggel ngel miino, where ngel prefixes the adjective miino ('big') to agree with the class of naggel ('cow', class nge-). This concord extends to pronouns, which inflect to match the noun's class for reference.[80][79][81] Derivational processes often involve class shifts, where a noun changes class to alter its meaning, such as shifting a singular form to a plural class to denote collectivity or abundance, or to a diminutive class for smallness. For instance, a tree in class no- singular (no gal 'tree') may shift to a plural class like ɓe- for a collective sense of 'forest'. Such shifts enable productive morphology without additional affixes, though they may trigger consonant mutations at the stem boundary.[80][7][79]| Semantic Category | Singular Prefix | Plural Prefix | Example Noun (Singular/Plural) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Humans | o-/Ø- | ɓe- | o neɗɗo / ɓe neɗɗe ('person/people')[79][82] |
| Liquids/Abstracts | ndiy- | am-/ɓe- | ndiyam / ɓam ɗiyam ('water/waters')[79] |
| Animals | nge- | ngu-/ɗum- | naggel / ngu naggel ('cow/cows')[79][83] |
| Diminutives | ngel- | ɓa-/wo- | ngel-gal / ɓa-gal ('small tree/small trees')[84] |
| Augmentatives/Large Objects | ko-/ngo- | ɓe-/ba- | ko-ɗam / ɓe-ɗam ('large compound/compounds')[84] |
Pronouns
Fula personal pronouns encompass both independent forms, used for emphasis or standalone reference, and bound forms that attach to verbs as subject or object markers. Independent forms include miɗo or mi (1SG), aɗa or a (2SG), omo or o (3SG animate), e (3SG inanimate), ɓe (3PL human), miɗen or min (1PL exclusive), eɗen or en (1PL inclusive), oɗon or on (2PL), and eɓe or ɓe (3PL).[85][42] Bound forms vary by verbal conjugation but typically include suffixes like -am (1SG), -a (2SG), -o (3SG), -min (1PL exclusive), -en (1PL inclusive), -on (2PL), and -ɓe (3PL) for objects or certain tenses.[85] A key feature of Fula personal pronouns is the distinction in the first-person plural between inclusive (eɗen or en, referring to speaker plus addressee) and exclusive (miɗen or min, referring to speaker excluding addressee), which affects both independent and bound realizations across dialects.[42] Possessive pronouns in Fula are postposed to the noun and obligatorily agree with the noun class of the possessed item, reflecting the language's noun class system. They combine a person stem with the class marker vowel or prefix, such as the 1SG stem mi- or am- yielding miino or amino for o-class nouns (e.g., o neɗɗo miino 'my person'), miika for ka-class (e.g., jam ka miika 'my peace'), or miiji for ji-class.[85][86] Similar patterns apply to other persons, with 2SG maa- (e.g., maano 'your (SG) blood'), 3SG woo- (e.g., woono 'his/her blood'), and plurals adjusting accordingly (e.g., 1PL exclusive manno).[85] Demonstrative pronouns in Fula distinguish proximal (near speaker) from distal (farther away) and follow the noun while agreeing in noun class and number. They are typically formed with the class prefix plus a deictic suffix, such as proximal -ndi or -i and distal -ndu or -u, resulting in forms like ono or onndi (proximal 'this one', o-class singular) versus onu (distal 'that one'), or ɓeeɗi (proximal 'these', ɓe-class plural) versus ɓeenu (distal 'those').[87][88] This agreement mirrors noun class patterns, with proximal forms often nasalized in some dialects.[89] Interrogative pronouns include nagan or nagge for 'who', which inflects for noun class and number (e.g., nagan for singular animate, nageŋ for plural).[90] Reflexive pronouns are constructed using the noun mun 'head/self' with a possessive prefix, such as mi mun 'myself', ka mun 'yourself (SG)', or class-agreeing forms like o mun 'himself', often employed in emphatic or reciprocal contexts.[91][92]Verbal morphology
Fulfulde exhibits agglutinative verbal morphology, where verbs are formed by attaching prefixes and suffixes to a lexical root to indicate subject agreement, derivation, voice, tense, aspect, and mood (TAM). The core structure typically consists of a subject prefix, optional derivational extensions or infixes, the verb root, a voice suffix, and TAM markers, with person, number, and gender agreement incorporated into the suffixes.[93] This system allows for complex combinations, though phonological rules may alter forms at morpheme boundaries.[93] Tense-aspect-mood is primarily marked by suffixes following the voice marker, with two main aspects: completive (perfective) and incompletive (imperfective or progressive). The perfective aspect, denoting completed actions, is often realized with the suffix -aa, as in the verb nyaam-aa 'ate' from the root nyaam 'eat'.[94] The progressive aspect, indicating ongoing actions, employs the suffix -ande, for example nyaam-ande 'is eating'.[2] Mood distinctions, such as hortative or subjunctive, are expressed through specialized suffixes or periphrastic constructions involving auxiliaries.[94] Voice is marked by suffixes that alter the verb's valency or semantic role. The active voice is typically unmarked or ends in -um/-ude, the middle voice in -aa/-aade (often overlapping with perfective marking), and the passive in -ee/-eede.[95] The middle voice can derive reciprocals with the suffix -oo, as in ɓall-oo 'insult each other' from ɓall 'insult'.[96] Causatives, which add a causer argument, insert the infix -i- (or -in- in some dialects) into the root, for example dum-i- 'cause to sit' from dum 'sit'.[97] Negation is realized through a preverbal prefix mi- or a suffix -ii, depending on the aspect and voice; for instance, mi-nyaam-ii 'did not eat' contrasts with the affirmative nyaam-aa.[98] In completive forms, negation may combine with polarity markers like -ma or -no.[98] Derivational extensions can modify the root to create new verbs from nominal bases or adjust semantics. A representative example is the noun wuro 'house' yielding the verb wur-t- 'build', where -t- functions as an extensional suffix to verbalize the root.[99] Such extensions often interact with voice and TAM markers, and consonant mutations may occur at junctions, as detailed in the phonology section.[93]Consonant mutation
Consonant mutation, commonly referred to as initial consonant gradation, is a central morphological process in the Fula language, involving systematic alternations in the initial consonant of stems to mark grammatical distinctions such as number in nouns and derivation in verbs. This phenomenon affects stops and sonorants, which cycle through four primary grades labeled B, D, F, and G, reflecting degrees of fortition and lenition. Grade B represents the strong or basic form (typically stops), grade D the prenasalized variant, grade F the lenited form (fricatives or approximants), and grade G the most reduced form (often approximants or deletion).[100][101] The alternations follow a structured pattern across consonant series, as illustrated in the table below for representative examples. These grades apply to the initial consonants of noun and verb stems, with the specific form determined by the grammatical context.| Consonant Series | Grade B (Strong) | Grade D (Prenasalized) | Grade F (Lenited) | Grade G (Reduced) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilabial | b | mb | w | Ø (deletion) |
| Velar | g | ŋg | y | Ø (deletion) |
| Dental | d | nd | r | l |
| Palatal | j | nj | y | Ø (deletion) |
| Labiodental | f | - | v | Ø (deletion) |
Syntax
Word order
The Fula language, also known as Fulfulde, exhibits a basic constituent order of Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) in main clauses, which serves as the neutral structure for declarative sentences. This order aligns with typological classifications for the language across its dialects, facilitating straightforward expression of predicate-argument relations without heavy reliance on case marking. For instance, the sentence Miɗo wudde jam illustrates this pattern, where miɗo (I) is the subject, wudde (see) the verb, and jam (person) the object, translating to "I see the person."[106][42] Word order demonstrates flexibility, particularly in focus constructions driven by topic prominence, where elements are reordered to highlight new or contrastive information. In such cases, the focused constituent is typically fronted, and the remaining clause may adopt a Verb-Subject-Object (VSO) order, as seen in emphatic structures where the verb precedes the subject to underscore the action or agent. This shift supports information packaging, with focalizing particles often accompanying the reordered elements to signal emphasis, though verb forms remain consistent with those described in verbal morphology. Western dialects like Pulaar permit greater fluidity in these focus-driven reorderings compared to eastern varieties.[107][108][1] Adpositional phrases in Fula predominantly employ prepositions, which precede the noun phrase they govern, such as ka jam ("with the person"). Postpositions are rare and do not play a significant role in the language's syntax. Dialectal variations influence the rigidity of these patterns, with eastern varieties like Adamawa Fulfulde showing a stricter adherence to SVO in main clauses, while western dialects such as Pulaar permit greater fluidity in focus-driven reorderings.[87]Clause types
The declarative clause in Fula (also known as Fulfulde or Pulaar) exhibits a subject-verb-object (SVO) word order, where the subject precedes the finite verb, which carries aspectual marking through prefixes that indicate distinctions such as perfective, imperfective, or habitual.[75] This structure aligns with the language's Niger-Congo typology, allowing the verb to agree in class and number with the subject via pronominal prefixes. For instance, a basic declarative might express an action like "The man eats the food" as Wuro jam-oo mbadde, where wuro is the subject 'man', jam-oo the verb 'eat' with perfective marking, and mbadde the object 'food'. Aspect marking is crucial for conveying temporal and modal nuances, with the perfective often defaulting in narrative contexts to denote completed events.[1] Yes/no interrogatives are primarily formed through the addition of the invariant particle ko, which typically follows the subject in the SVO frame, or alternatively by a rising intonation contour without morphological changes to the verb. The particle ko functions as a clause-level marker of polarity questioning, maintaining the underlying declarative structure while shifting illocutionary force; for example, "Does the man eat?" could be rendered as Wuro ko jam-oo? (literally 'man Q eat'). This particle-based strategy is widespread across Fula dialects, though intonation alone suffices in casual speech or when ko is omitted for emphasis.[109][110] Wh-questions involve fronting the interrogative word or phrase to the clause-initial position, followed by resumption of the SVO order, resulting in structures like "What did the man eat?" without dedicated question particles beyond optional clause-final na. Interrogative pronouns such as aane ('who'), mbo ('what'), or aafa ('where') are morphologically bound with suffixes like -ye or -e in some cases, and the verb retains aspectual prefixes agreeing with the subject; traces of the extracted element remain in situ. For example, "What did the man eat?" appears as Mbo wuro jam-oo? (with mbo fronted and the subject-verb sequence intact). This movement targets a specifier position in the CP domain, distinguishing wh-questions from declaratives through displacement rather than inversion.[111] Relative clauses lack dedicated relative pronouns and instead integrate via class agreement prefixes on the verb, which match the head noun's gender and number, embedding the clause postnominally without resumptive elements. The relative verb adopts specialized paradigms, often with a ko-suffix for non-factive modification, ensuring head-verb concord; for instance, "the man who eats" is structured as wuro [mi jam-oo mbadde] (where the prefix agrees with the masculine singular head wuro). This agreement-driven relativization supports both restrictive and non-restrictive functions, with the clause bracketed by the head and a potential final determiner for definiteness. Factive relatives may parallel headed structures through shared complementizers, but the core mechanism remains prefixal harmony.[112]Nominal phrases
Nominal phrases in Fulfulde are head-initial, with the head noun preceding its modifiers, including adjectives, possessors, and genitive constructions. Adjectives follow the noun and agree with it in noun class through prefixes or suffixes that match the head's class marker, ensuring morphological harmony within the phrase. For example, in the Adamawa dialect, the phrase for "big cow" is structured as nákku ɗúm, where nákku is the head noun in class 9 and ɗúm is the adjective "big" prefixed with the class 9 marker ɗ-. Possessors and genitives also follow the possessed noun in a construct state, without a linking particle in basic alienable possession; for instance, "John's cow" appears as nákku Yuusúu, where the possessor Yuusúu ("John") follows directly and may take a class suffix agreeing with the head.[113] Determiners in nominal phrases distinguish definiteness through class markers. The definite article is realized as a suffix on the head noun, often -u in singular forms across various classes, marking the phrase as specific or known, while indefinite phrases are typically unmarked or use a short form of the class marker. Noun class agreement extends to these determiners, which follow the head noun in definite contexts; for example, bóor-u ("the man," class 6) uses the -u suffix for definiteness, contrasting with the bare stem bóor in indefinite use. This system leverages the language's 20+ noun classes to encode referentiality without separate words for "the" or "a."[77][67] Coordination of nominal phrases employs the conjunction nden, linking two or more NPs with additive meaning, often in parallel structures. For instance, nákku nden ngáal-u translates to "a cow and the sheep," where nden connects the conjoined elements while preserving class agreement on subsequent modifiers if present. This conjunction facilitates simple juxtaposition without altering the head-initial order of individual phrases.[86] Topicalization in Fulfulde involves fronting the nominal phrase to the sentence-initial position for emphasis or focus, detaching it from its canonical post-verbal slot. This fronting highlights the NP as the topic, often requiring a resumptive pronoun or class marker in its original position to maintain agreement and coherence; for example, moving "the big cow" to the front as Nákku ɗúm ñáppi... ("The big cow, it ate...") underscores the referent without disrupting phrase-internal structure. Such constructions are common in discourse to signal given information or contrast.[114][115]Writing systems
Latin orthography
The Latin orthography of the Fula language traces its origins to the late 19th century, when Christian missionaries in northern Nigeria introduced the Latin script to facilitate education and religious instruction in the Adamawa Fulfulde variety. This early adoption was part of broader European colonial efforts to romanize African languages, though initial systems were inconsistent and adapted locally for Fula's phonetic features, such as implosives and nasal vowels. A standardized Latin-based system was established in 1966 during a UNESCO-sponsored conference in Bamako, Mali, which aimed to harmonize orthographies across West African languages, including Fula (known as Fulfulde or Pulaar in various dialects).[116] The Guinean variant, influential in Fouta Djallon, incorporates diacritics like â, ê, and ñ to represent nasalized vowels and palatal sounds, reflecting French linguistic influence in the region.[61] This standard expanded the alphabet to 28 letters, with additional digraphs and symbols to capture Fula's complex consonant inventory and vowel harmony. Consonant representation in the standard includes digraphs like mb for the prenasalized /mb/ and ny (or ñ/ɲ in some variants) for the palatal nasal /ɲ/, while implosive sounds are denoted by hooked letters such as ƃ for /ɓ/ (bilabial implosive) and ɗ for /ɗ/ (alveolar implosive).[49] These choices address Fula's use of implosives and prenasalized stops, which are common in Atlantic languages, ensuring phonetic accuracy without excessive digraphs. Vowel systems use five basic letters (a, e, i, o, u), with length indicated by doubling (e.g., aa for /aː/), and nasalization marked by sequences like an or en for /ã/, /ɛ̃/, or in some regional forms by diacritics such as â and ê.[61] Regional variants diverge in diacritic usage and simplification. The Nigerian orthography for Fulfulde uses hooked letters such as ɗ and ƃ, though it may favor digraphs like ny over ñ to align with Hausa-influenced printing traditions.[49] In contrast, the Senegalese standard for Pulaar retains full diacritics (â, ê, ñ) for nasal vowels and palatals, promoting consistency in education and literature across the Sahel.[61] By 2025, digital font support has improved significantly, with Unicode-compliant typefaces like Noto Sans supporting all Fula Latin characters, including implosive hooks and diacritics, facilitating online publishing and mobile keyboards in Guinea and Senegal.Arabic script
The adaptation of the Arabic script for writing the Fula language, known as Ajami or Ajamiya, emerged with the introduction of Islam to the Fula people, who were among the first Atlantic-language speakers to convert in the 11th to 12th centuries.[117] This script facilitated the transcription of Fulfulde for religious purposes, including Qur'anic commentaries, devotional literature, and Islamic scholarship, as well as secular poetry that blended local oral traditions with Islamic themes.[118] Early adoption occurred in Qur'anic schools across West Africa, where Fula scholars used Ajami to make Islamic teachings accessible in their vernacular, promoting literacy within Muslim communities.[5] To accommodate Fula's phonological features absent in Arabic, such as implosive consonants and the advanced tongue root (ATR) vowel harmony system, scribes developed modifications including additional diacritics and letter variants. For instance, the implosive /ɓ/ is often represented by بْ (bāʾ with a sukūn), while other implosives like /ɗ/ may use دْ or dotted forms; vowels are marked with diacritics like fatha (َ) for /a/, with adaptations for harmony.[119] These adaptations varied regionally without a single standardized orthography, allowing flexibility for local dialects but resulting in diverse manuscript styles across Sahelian regions.[120] Prominent examples of Fulfulde-Ajami manuscripts include qasidas, or religious odes, such as those praising the Prophet Muhammad or commemorating jihad leaders like Usman dan Fodio, often mixing Fulfulde with Arabic quotations from the Qur'an. These poetic works, preserved in private collections and libraries in Nigeria and Senegal, served both liturgical and educational roles, with titles like Mantugol Nelaaɗo (Praise of the Prophet) exemplifying the script's use in devotional verse.[121] Following European colonization in the 19th and 20th centuries, Ajami usage for Fula declined due to the imposition of Latin-based orthographies in schools and administration, marginalizing indigenous scripts as "non-modern."[122] Despite this, the script persists among Fula communities in Niger and Mali for religious writing, personal correspondence, and cultural expression, particularly in rural Qur'anic schools where it complements oral traditions.[117] In recent years, including limited initiatives as of 2025, revival efforts through digitization projects and educational programs have aimed to document and teach Ajami, countering historical erasure and integrating it into formal curricula in select West African institutions.[123]Adlam script
The Adlam script, also known as ADLaM, was invented in the 1980s by brothers Ibrahima Barry and Abdoulaye Barry in Guinea to promote literacy in the Fula language (Fulfulde), which lacked an efficient and phonetically accurate writing system at the time.[52][124] As teenagers—Ibrahima aged 14 and Abdoulaye aged 10—the brothers designed the script to better represent Fula sounds, drawing inspiration from Arabic script's directionality while addressing the limitations of existing systems used by the Fulani people.[125] The name Adlam is an acronym from the first four letters of the alphabet (A, D, L, M), translating to "the alphabet that will save the people from disappearing" in Fula, reflecting its cultural preservation goals.[126] Adlam is a right-to-left alphabetic script featuring 28 letters (23 consonants and 5 vowels), with each letter constructed from simple vertical strokes that facilitate cursive joining and independent forms.[125][127] It includes uppercase and lowercase variants, along with diacritics for vowel length, gemination, and additional sounds.[128] The script was officially encoded in the Unicode Standard with version 9.0 in June 2016, enabling digital support across platforms. Its phonetic design ensures a near one-to-one correspondence between letters and Fula phonemes, making it highly suitable for the language's consonantal and vowel features, while the vertical stroke structure allows easy writing even on surfaces like the ground using a stick.[52][124] By 2025, Adlam's adoption has accelerated through digital tools, including mobile apps and keyboards such as Tappirgal Adlam, which support seamless input on Android and iOS devices and integrate with social media platforms.[129] This has fueled grassroots usage among Fulani communities, with textbooks and educational materials produced in Nigeria and Senegal to teach the script in schools and informal settings.[124][130] Social media has played a key role in its spread, enabling users to share content in Adlam and fostering a sense of cultural connectivity across West Africa.[131] However, challenges persist in standardization, including variations in letter forms and accommodations for Fula dialects, which efforts continue to address through community-led orthography development.[132][133]Illustrative examples
Sample text
The following is an excerpt from the Lord's Prayer in Adamawa Fulfulde, presented in Latin orthography. This text highlights key grammatical features of the language, such as noun class agreement and verbal imperatives. The excerpt is limited to the opening lines for brevity. Latin script (Adamawa Fulfulde): Yaa Baabiraawo amin mo asama.a Ceniiɗo waɗ koo moy teddina innde ma.
Laamu maaɗa wara.
Muuyo ma laato nder duniyaaru bana haa asama.
Hokku min nyaamdu deydey haaje amin hannde.[134] Phonetic transcription (IPA): [jaː baːbiɾaːwo aˈmin mo aˈsa ma]
[a t͡ʃeniːɗo waɗ koː moj teɗːina inːɗe ma]
[laːmu maːɗa waɾa]
[muːjo ma laːto nder duˈɲjaːru ˈba na haː aˈsa ma]
[ˈhokːu min ɲaːmdu ˈdɛjdɛj haːdʒɛ aˈmin hanːɗɛ] Interlinear gloss: Yaa Baabi-raa-wo amin mo asama.
VOC father-CL2-our we in heaven. a Ceniiɗo waɗ koo moy teddina innde ma.
IMPV.SG hallow-CL9 the REL.SG thy honor name 3SG. Laamu maaɗa wara.
kingdom thy-CL9 come.IMPV. Muuyo ma laato nder duniyaaru bana haa asama.
will-CL9 thy do.FUT on earth.PL like in heaven. Hokku min nyaamdu deydey haaje amin hannde.
give.IMPV us today this day our bread. Free English translation: Our Father, who art in heaven.
Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.[134]
Common phrases
The Fula language features a rich set of everyday phrases that reflect the pastoral lifestyle and social etiquette of its speakers, the Fulani people. Note that phrases vary by dialect; these are primarily from the Adamawa Fulfulde dialect, with pulaaku (Fulani code of conduct) emphasizing respectful, extended greetings. Variations exist across its many dialects, spoken by an estimated 35–65 million people (native and second-language speakers).[3]Greetings and Responses
Common greetings revolve around "jam" (peace) and are often time-specific.- Good morning: Jam wali (early morning).[135]
- Peace be upon you (formal, often Arabic-influenced): Salaamu aleikum, responded with Aleikum salaam.
- How are you?: No mbadda? (singular) or A jaŋgo? (how are things?). Response: Jam tan (I'm fine) or Jam tun (peace only).[135]
- Welcome (upon arrival): A jaɓɓama (singular) or On jaɓɓama (plural). Response: Mi jaɓi (I accept).[136]
Basic Inquiries and Numbers
Inquiries often build on greetings to check on health or location, with numbers useful for counting livestock or trade.- What is your name?: Noy innde ma? Response: Innde am [name] (My name is [name]).[137]
- Numbers 1-10: 1 go'o, 2 ɗiɗi, 3 tati, 4 nay, 5 jowi, 6 jeego, 7 jeeɗiɗi, 8 jeetati, 9 jeenay, 10 sappo. These cardinal numbers are consistent across many dialects for basic counting.[138]
Polite Forms and Farewells
Politeness is central to Fulani social norms (pulaaku), with expressions of gratitude and parting underscoring respect.- Thank you: Jaraama or Tiyaabu (also used as goodbye). Response: Baraaji (you're welcome).[139]
- Please: Useni.
- Goodbye (parting): Tiyaabu or Haa gonngol (may you go well). See you later: Sey yeeso.[135]
Cultural Phrases: Pastoral Terms
Fulani culture is deeply tied to cattle herding, so vocabulary reflects this heritage.- Herd (of cattle): Naagu (refers to a group of livestock under care).
- Cow: Nagge.[83]