Verran

Grammar
Verran is narrowly head-final and tends to extensively conjugate verbs and decline nouns rather than use separate words for modifying meaning. Verran uses the word order of (Subject/Object/other nouns)—>(verb) to convey simple ideas, and compounds phrases such as “my mom’s favorite green hat is falling quickly off the side of the building” into “(green-subject)hat (favorite of-my-ownership)mom (off the side of -locative)building (is-continuos)falling,” the words used would be agglutinated words, basically: “hat mom building falling”

Verbs
Must begin with a consonant and end with an “e,” which is modified depending on the aspect of the verb (is it continuos? is it a single action? etc.) and verbs are conjugated with prefixes to show the time that the verb occurred in. Verb temporal prefixes take the first letter of the verb root word and add different vowels depending on the time, and the letter “n” to denote that section of the word’s status as a prefix. an example is the verb “deve” which means “to run(present/singular/indistinct).” Conjugating “Ak deve” (i run) to “Ak da’andevo” changes the meaning to (i was running continuously in the past). Additionally, one can convey the opposite idea of a pre/post fix by adding “r” after the last vowel (or between vowels). “Ak dervo” would then mean “I did not *RUN*” while “Ak devor” means “i did not run in the *PAST*,” and “Ark devo” means “*I* did not run in the past.