Uciac script

The Uciac script (Baratawla: Ūlāqit aUcye; Khaba: Aksari Usia) is an abugida writing system used to write Nesionytan in Ucian Nutaderram inscriptions, as well as several local Uciac languages. Based on the and Shimboric scripts, Uciac was developed in modern-day Ucia in the first half of the 2nd century AD, and was used to write both Baratawla and Khaba, which later abandoned the system in favor of. It is still widely used for religious purposes.

Uciac is generally written from without spaces between words, unlike most native Nesionytan scripts and similar to Southeast Asian scripts. Consonant clusters have letters "stacked". The script has 29 consonants and five vowel diacritics, with several other diacritics representing special sounds. The script is functions in a similar way to Namayanga, a Morasavian script.

History
The Uciac script was created by Nutaderrami monk Mendachik Glalawanduro in approximately the 3rd century, for codification of sacred Nutaderrami texts in local Uciac languages, including his native Hifanluko, which is currently extinct. Used to transliterate both Nesionytan and Proto-Tawlic, the script was mostly based on both Brahmic and Shimboric scripts. Prior to the creation of Uciac, the Shimboric script was used to write native languages in the Ucian archipelago.

The script was generally used for all Uciac languages, until the script was mostly abandoned in favor of the, as a result of the French colonization of Ucia in 1745, and was still left abandoned even after Ucia's independence from France in 1829. Many of the manuscripts of the script were kept in the historical section of the Qarwaliat Cultural Museum. However, it is still used by Nutaderrami religious leaders to write Nesionytan and Proto-Tawlic.